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                  <text>Tuesday. December 10. 1986-

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

'

Despondent fanner
kills three, himself
"Evldenlly, there was more to It
than we knew/' said his couslri.
Mary Burr. "Hewasaverypleasant
Individual and always a good friend
toallofus."
Burr,amemberoltheRurallowa
· Property Taxpayers of Johnson
County, which was founded to
proti'St an Increase 1n land valuattons ftlrtaxPSduPOct . l.hadhl'en
farming since he graduated high
school in the 1940s.
·
"His farm was light down the
road from his parents'," Burr's
brother-In-law, Keith Forbes, said.
"He's been a farmer since he got out
of high school. That's what he
always wanted to do."
Monday, Burr, totlrig a 12- gauge
shotgun under a coat. barged into
the r:Jtlce of the Hills Bank at about
11 a.m. CST and fired one shot at
Hughi'S, hilt!rig him IIi the head and
kllllrig him, the Johnson County
sheriff's department sald.
Burr polrited the gun at two bank
vlceprt'Sidentsbutdidrotfire,then
drove away in hlsplckuptrucktothe
farm of his neighbor, Goody, with
whom he apparently had aflrianclal
dispute, the sheriffs department
said.
BurrthenshotGoodytodeathand
fired several shots at Goody's wife
and son before fleeing.
Burr was next spotted In his truck
near his home In rura!Lone'l)'ee by
a deputy who pulled him over and
arrested him. However. whUe the
deputy waited for assistance, Burr
shot himself to death, the sheriff's
department said.
A subsequent search of Burr's
home turned up the lxldy r:J his wife,
apparently shot to death by her
husband, deputii'S said.

HILLS, Iowa t UPI ) - A farml'r
facing thl' loss of the land hi' tllledfor
four decadE'S killed ,himself and
three others in a rovlrig shooting
spree, shocking those who knew
him, but not those who kni'W onl)i of
the crisis IIi agriculture.
Dale Burr, 63, Monday killed his
wife, Emily, 64, his bank president,
Johri Hughi'S, 43, and a fi'Uow
farmer. Ri.chard Goody, 38, before
shooting himself whlll' a deputy who
had put him under arrest waited for
help, authorities said.
"All the farmprs' troublE'S, problems, it takE'S the town by surprise,"
said AI Hirt, a resident or Hills,
· population 500, for 31 years. "It's a
shame, but I'm surprised It didn't
happen sooner."
State officials have spoken of the
possibility falling farmers would
tum violent, and Dan Levitas of
Pralrleflre, a group that counsels
flnimcially troubled farmers, said:
"This is what we've been warning
about all along."
HUls Bank and Trust Co., officials
refused comment on Burr's finan·
ces. But records in the Johnson
County assessor's office showed the
bank had paid about $5,00lln tax~
on Burr's 500-acre farm Sept. 20,
then revoked payment four days
later. The payment scheduled for
Oct. 1 had not been made.
Jim Stockman, owner of Hills
Grain and Feed lllc., said Burr was
IIi dan~r r:J losing his farm and had
grown despondent durlng the past
few weeks. "You could tell something was bothering him pretty
bad," Stockman said.
Burr's flrianclal problems also
were known to his family, but their
severity came as a shock .

·EPA takes new look ai Ohio coal problems . ..,
'

Restaurant for a dinner. The group
will then go to the lodge hall In
Chester for a meet !rig and party .
There wlll be a gift exchange and
each member Is to taketwopleci'Sof
fruit to be used In making fruit
baskets for members unable to
attend.

Meigs County Emergency Medi cal Service reports five calls
Monday; Middleport at 2:15 a.m.
treated but did not transport Ronald
Hawkins; Syracuse at 2:16 p.m.
went to Mlnersvllle for Leona
Leivlng to Holzer Medical Center;
Middleport at 4:17p.m. transported
Raymond CundiH from the Holzer
Clinic to Holzer Medical Center;
Racine at 9:03 p.m. transported
Larry Holsinger Jr. !rom the fire
sta tlon to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 9:41 p.m.
transported Virginia Hlndy to
Holzer Medical Center.

GOOD TEAM
father-daughter Rllldea good team least as
far as deer hunting Is concerned. Pictured are Delanl and Bob Baker,
Sumner Rood resident. Delanloi baged her lln!t deer this season, a doe
on Monday, and her father got Ills nine point buck m Wednesday.

r---------------..;...
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__,
·1
Area death
I
Clara E. Heines
Clara E . Heines, 92, Hemlock
Grove, died Tuesday at Veterans
MemorlalHospltal.
A housewife, Mrs. Heines was
born Dec. 23, 1892 in Pomeroy , a
daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Charli'S Thomas. She was a
member of the United Methodist
Church.
Surviving are a grandson, Larry
Heinl'S; a granddaughter, Mrs. Don
(Susie) Grui'Ser; a daughter-in-law,
Louise Heines, all local, seven
great -grandchildren and several
nieces and nephi'Ws.

Lottery winning
numbers: 198,2514

INGELS
FURNITURE
&amp; JEWELRY.

SO WAn
DUEL

Seeks divorce
'

Minia R. Pickens, Racine, has
filed for a divorce from Ronnie M.
Pickens, Racine, charging gross
neglect of duty andextrernecruclty.

The Middleport Amateur Garden
Club wlll meet at the LaSalle for a
Christmas diMer at • 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday. There wlll be a gift
exchange and Jan~t Koblentzwill be
in charge of the program.

Dinner planned

~FISHER"
.-------------1

Today ... varlable cloudlni'SS with
n chance of rain. High around 00.
South winds 10 to 15 mph.
Tonlght ... raln likely. Low In t.he
mid 40s. South winds 10 to 15 mph.
Wednf'Sday ... rain. High 00 to 65.
Chance of precipitation Is 50
percent today .. 70 percent tonight
and 90 percent Wednesday.
Extended forecast
A chance of snow Thursday and
Friday. Fair Saturday with a
chance of flurries northeast. Tum·
Jng colder with highs 25 to 35
Thursday .. in the 20s Friday and in
the teens Saturday. Lows In the 20s
Thursday .. ln the teens Friday and5
to 15 Saturday.

0311ACKSON PIKE ·Rl35 WEST
Phone .w&amp;· ~52&lt;1

'VHS VIdeo

$34900
IW"•Ii.Mnl4t)rW ~ ii)IIO'ill

..,..,. ,..llrimlt~au ""' t. , rnr r.~

CHRISTMAS SP~CIAL
$488°0

NOW 0Pfl4 FOR THE
CHRISTMAS 'SEASON
Pointlttiat, lknging .Wets, Uw
&amp; Cut Chrillmls Tnn, Holy &amp;
lue Sftrua1 Tnn. Christmas
Cactvs. Door WJIIiths, Carlile
Arra~nts, Folage ftrntl. For

.;·.:. ~

Christmas Deliftry·Credit Terms

Ingels Furniture
&amp; Jewel

the lo-' -·· """ ....~~,

.'

v.... MDnlmlnl Sprays.
Open Daiy 9· 5: Sundlv 1· 5

'

(-!try

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Vol.36, No.186

~s,,..;...,

With A Smile"

Located In

POMEROY

OH.

WASHINGTON (UPI)- With Pri'Sldent Reagan
and Republican leaders divided, the House is ready to
vote on a massive Democratic tax overhaul blll that
would drop rates; limit loopholesandshlftrnuchofthe
tax burden from individuals to businesses.
Setting the stage for the House wte, probably late
today, the Rules Committee Tuesday night cleared
the blll drlifted by the Democrat· dominated Ways
and ,'Means Committe!' and rejected numerous
a(ll!I!Bls by both liberals and conservatives who had
asked permission to push amendments on the Ooor.
Reagan, meanwhUe, kept . up his personal
campaign for tax overhaulleg!slallon, but apparently
faDed to convince House GOP leaders lD drop their ·
opposition to the committee plan.
Under the procedure approved 1tl-3 by the Rules

C 1985 Hattm1111 Cards. Inc.

--

•

The Ohio Department of Development' sOfflceofTravelandTourism
will soon be dispersing $3JO,IOO IIi
grant montes to various areas of the
state. Meigs County will notbeoneof
those areas.
A ccoperatlve effort among the
Pomeroy ~ Chamber of Commerce, the Meigs County Historical
Society and the Meigs County Park
District began late this summer to
secure a $15,100 matching grant
from OOOD to promote travel and
tourism bt the county.
The ~t proposallnqudeillocill
' matcll!nii throulh bt·klnd serviCes
and doliattons' bringing' the grant
value to $3:),100.
Thegrantmoneywouldhavehl'en
used by the three sponsoring
organizations to develop a county
brochure and map highlighting
local points cl Interest. Sale of
adverttsments would have helped
pay tile r~ulred match.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) -Ohio
Bell Telephone Co.'s residential
rates will soon be gobtg up by 50
cents a month - far less than what

Christmas
program
presented

'

WE OFFER AWIDE VARIETY OF DURABLE MEDICAL EQUIPMENT SUCH
AS HOSPITAL BEDS, WHEELCHAIRS, WALKERS, BEDSIDE COMMODES,
OXYGEN EQUIPMENT, ADULT DIAPERS &amp; UNDERPADS,· ETC.

Billing for All P~tien~s
24 Hour Emergency Call
Qualified &amp; Experienced Personnel
Access to Over 2,000 Homecare Supplies
We Accept Assignment on ·
Approved Government Claims

6. Free Delivery and Pickup
7. Same Day Service
AND ALL OTHER SERVICES NEEDED BY.
MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS

CALL 992-5740
..
'

&lt;

J

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Local parade winners

1

Photo 011 Page •4

1

·- · -~ ·-

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•

enttne
2 Section. 14 Pagel 25 Conti
A Multimedia l~c. NewiPIPir

Committee, theonlymajoramendmentallowedtohl'
brought to the floor was a Republlcan alternative tax
plan that was almost C!!rlaln lD be defeated IIi the
Democrat- domlriated chamber.
·
The lawmakers also plaimed to drop quickly a
potentially embarrassing provision Included In the
tax bill which givE'S preferential tax treatment lD the
pensions of members of Congress and their staffs.
A floor vote was also expected on a provision W
allow taxpayers to take up to a $100 tax credit for
contrlbutlonstheymaketocongressionalcampalgns.
The mabt fOCus, however, was on whether enough
RepubliCans, who generally oppose the bill, would
agree with Reagan and vote for It simply as a way to
send a measure lD the Senate, where It can be
considered next year. House Democratic leaders

our country."
In general, the committee bill does not go as far as
Reagan's plan, but it keeps his general thrust of
limiting tax breaks In exchange for lower rates. It
would, over five years, shift about $140 billion of tl)t'
nation's tax bill from Individuals to businesses.
Instead of the current 15 tax ratE'S, ranging from 11
percent to 50 percent, Reagan wouldcreatethree-15
percent,25percentand35percent.Thepoorestprople
would not be taxed and the top corporate rate would
drop from 46 percent to 33 percent.
The committee bUJ Is slmUar, but creates four
personal tax ratE'S ofl5 percent, 25 percent, 35 percen't
and 38 percent, with a maximum corporate rate of 36
percent. The very poor would also be removed from
taxation under the plan.

Lawrence Countian I Gallco Workshop
latest lotto millionaire grant given nod
'

Part of the grant would also have
been used to develop a slide show

presentation c1 county highlights to
be shown in schools al)d meetings of
local organizations.
Development cl the lrochure and
slldeshow presentation would have
would produced several parttlme
jObs In the areas of research and
photography.
Stephen Powell, a ,park district
commissioner for the county, received mtiflcatkmofthl'denlalfrom
Tim Kauflman of the Office of
' n-avel and T.ourism.
KaUHDWI did not go Into detail
but told Po-kell there was much
compettilon from the major cities
this year.
·He explained that aU proposals
were scored on a pobtt system and
because the cltli'S had greater
financial sources from which to
work, thereby employing more
(Continued on page 14)

have said about 50 GOP votes would be needed to
overcome expected Democratk: defections.
Even though Reagan's plan differs In some key
respects from the committee bDI, the president has
conceded that a defeat of the panel's measure tn the
House would kill efforts to rewrlte the nation's tax
taws - a matter he has made his top domestic
prtorlty.
But most House Republican leaders don't agree
and have said they fear the cmporateprovlslons 1n the
committee blli could prompt a recession and higher
unemployment.
"Look, he (Reagan) ts our guy and we'll work with
him ton other issues)," House Republican Whip Trent
Lott of Mississippi said Tuesday. But "on this one, we
·
It's IP tllell:e§.LllltergJ&gt;ts of the economy of

I
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1
1
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t

·'

SCO'ITOWN, Ohlp (UPI) - The wlriner of the Ohio Lottery's
second-largest payout ever bought the tk:ketwortli$6.8 million from
his wife just 20 mlnutes before the drawing.
Paul H. Herrell, a self· employed truck driver from Lawrence
County, took the lucky tl~ket to Ohio Lottery officials In Marietta.
Validation came at 1:40 p.m. Tuesday from the Cleveland lottery
office.
"All the way to Marietta to verify the ticket, I kept thlpklng It
wouldn't tum out true- that therewould besomethlngwrong'Wlth the
ticket. I kept thfnldng people like us work for our money. We don't win
mUilons of dollars,'' said Paul's wife. Linda Herrell.
"Frankly, I stlll didn't believe It when Paul told me he had the six
winning numbers,'' she said.
She will receive a $10,!00 bonus from the Ohio Lottery Commission
for selling the winning ticket. Her husband will receive 20 annual
payments of $712,899.36.
Thl' top slngle-p&amp;.ewlnner was _Kirtland's David N. DeVault, who
won$7.~~UI!on'bt lll83.
Jt&lt;, ,
, "'
Tile Winning numbers on Herrell's llcket,1, 3, 5, 22, 31, and119; &gt;~'ere
selected by Auto Lotto.
·
Herrell said there Is nothing wrong with buying a ticket from his
wife, who runs Herrell's'Gl'OCe/'Y &amp; Carryout In Scottown.
"There Is nothing I cando about my wife being a ticket agent. If you
buy the ticket and the nurnbers are there, you're going to claim lt,~'he
said.
·
''Actually, I didn't even know I was a winner untU 10 a.m. Monday
when I was In the store alone and thought to check the number."

CHESHIRE - A $314,580 grant
application by the Gallla County 169
Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities tn fund
the construction of a new Gallco
Sheltered Workshop has been
approved by theOhlo Department of

MRDD.
The grant represents 50percentof
the cost of the $00,1110 project,
according to Superintendent John
Rl!!e, PhD.
The Gallla County 169 ·wm make
upltssharewlth a$ZIO,OOltoanfrom
three Gallipolis banks and $135,1Dl
set aside In the department's
budget.
• An appllcattoit to• an •lllol!OO 1!1
kind contribution grant for the land
at the construction, adjacent to the
Guiding Hand School at Cheshire,
was rejected by the state.
Riffe said no specific reason for
the rejection was given other than
the state would provide no morte
than !11 percent tt the project's cost.
A project manager to oversee the

project has been appolrited bY the
state, which wlll alsosubmlta list of
approved architects, Riffe said.
"We'll bttervlew architects In the
latter part. of January and early
February," Riffe sald. "We'll
choose an architect around the first
of March and hopefUUy have plans
ready within ll days. !;lids should be
taken In AprU and construction
should begin around May 1."
The loan, obtained through the
Gallla County CommiSsion, wllllle
repaid over a flvPyearperlod at6.65
percent lnteres~ with two payments
to be made each year, ooefromeach
tax collection.
• Till! ~ved Ri'ant waa · the
board's second attempt at obtaining
a grant for the facility.
The board last year flied a
$1,004,046 grant request with the
Ohio MRDD to buDd the new
workshop. The state, however, said
It would fUnd half of the project, or
$527,046, with the local board
(Continued on page 14)

·- ..... --Residential telephone rates will go up 50 cents per month

Is Proud to Announce The ·
Opening Of Our New ·Branch
Office At
220 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

ASK FOR KIM OR RANDY

'·

1

· Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio. Wednesday. December 11. 1986

Meigs denied
•
tounsm grant

EDICAL l
EQUIP ENT, INC.

1.
2.
3.
4.
S.

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I

DAYS 'TIL CHRISTMAS

~

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Massive tax ·bill up for House vote

ELBERFELDS

$181

••

..

)

f

· Copyrighted 1186

w-·
+''"••-l-

Middleport

·&gt; .
'

·'

Video Stereo Recorder

STEREO RECORDIIG • PlAYIACII·
14 DAY· SEVENTTMR • CABU
READY· 14 PII£SITS • 10 FIIIC· 1
T10N WIIIISS REMOTE.

Hubbards Greenhouse

_.;

CABLE lEAD Y • 12 PRESETS
14 DAY • 3 EVENT TIMER
10 FIIICTION WIIIEIISS REMOTE

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
N""1'n}"tr·•lidbfo1M
II» honor tu • m .,., II!IOfl rlwl )' "' • •

PEPSI

Speel•l

..... '141¥

at y

FROM
$319

PENNZOIL

-

•

SALE PRICED

SUN FUN

IMaj~r ~-;.ter slo~ -,j
...

Rodney and Rhonda Reindeer
by a nose! Gi\·e this happy .
bean·baR couple a holiday
homecoming by placing
them under your Christmas

A regular meeting of the Racine
Masonic Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, will be
held at 7:30 p.m. this evening.
fnstallatlon of officers wl'l be he\d.

__.,...____

Photo, story 011 Page 10

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Report'Oil

The votes arc in - and it's

Meets tonight

Introducing an exciting new at.dio
system from Fisher! Powered by a 50watt per channel amplifier with a
bui~· in 5-band graphic equalizer, this
ialue-packed system features an
AM!FM · digital synthesized stereo
luner, dual cassette deck with high
speed dubbing and semi-automatic
lurntable. All this, plus a pair of threeway Fisher speakers ard a hard some
component cabinet. ~ th is fine
Fisher syslem today!

Weather forecast

.

Wednesday's regular rnePting of
the Meigs County Commissioners
has been canceled.

,_.....,_

Your·
Social
Security
Paae 1

OF THE YEAR!

Meeting cancelled

•

CASSETTE

'

complying with a proposal trf:
monitor sulfUr dioxide emissions orr-:
a dally basis Instead of the curreni::
30-day averaging method.
•.
What they heard was a repeat~'~!;:
assertion that electric compante{ :
would have to stop usbtg Ohio'':
high-sulfur coal, and that would cos{.:
hundreds of jobs.
·
:;
HodanboslsaldtheOhioEPAhad ;
feared that the feds were going to ·:
Institute daily emission monltorlng ~-.
at the start of 1986.
·
;.
"They are n&lt;)w saying a delay of~;:
six or seven months wouldn't hurt :.,.
that much," he related, adding the :.:.
Ohio EPA will be refining its points ;·'
andcommunicatlngthem btwrltlng ;
to Its federal counierpart within a &gt;:
week.
•'
"They seem to be amenabletoour ·
situation," said state Rep. Thomas·.
w.. Johnson, R· New Concord, who ·;
pointed out that unemployment m··
Harrison County, a coal-producing
county, was 25 percent last month. ·,

..

M,eigs ·teanlS triumph
Repot1l 011 Pages' 4,1

Besides her parents, she was
preceded IIi death by her husband,
George, two sisters and two
brothl'rs.
Services will be held at 1 p.m . . r-;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;~~~!;i~;;~·
Thursday at the Ewing Funeral I!
Home with Rev. CarlHicksofflclatlng. Burial will be in Hemlock Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Wednesday.

Admlsslons.. Laura Fields, Coolville: Clair Turner, Rutland.
Dlscharges.. Mary Pickens, Charii'S Ellis.

Pomeroy Chapter 8J, Royal Arch
Masons, and Bosworth Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters, will meet
at the Pomeroy temple at 7: 3() p.m.
Wednesday.

COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI) - The
U.S. Environmental Protection
'- 1ooklri g wtth more
Agency may""
sympathy on Ohloandltsdlfflcuttles
lncomplyingwith strlctalrmonitorlng standards after meeting with
Ohio Interest groups late last week.
"lthlnk the U.S. EPA Is now more
willing. to accept our information
and revii'W It," said Robert F.
Hodanbosl, manager of the air•
quality . model !rig and planning
section of the Ohio E:PA following
the ali-day closed-door , private
meetings last Friday.
Valdas Adamkus, administrator
for U.S. EPA Region V, Chicago,
and his staff visited with the state
EPA, the Ohio Coal Development
OffiCe, coal region legislators and
representativE'S of the Ohio M~nu facturersAssoclation,coalcoinpan·
les, mlneworkers and electric
utilities.
The federal officials came to hear
of thl' problems Ohio ·has in

.

Veterans Memorial

Wednesday meetings

The Past Councilors Club of
Chester Council 323. Daughters of
America, wlll meet at 6:ll p.m.
Wednesday at Crow's Family

CLEVELAND (UPII - Monday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers with ticket sales and
payouts:
Dally Number: 198.
Ticket sales totaled $1,211,147,
with a payoff due of $637,922.
PICK-4: 2514.
PICK-4 Ucket sail'S totaled
$177,983, with a payoff dueof$!ll,361 .
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays$3,792.
PICK-4 $1 box bet pays$158.

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i
II

Thl' EPA has recommended that
residents of Rutland Village boll
their water for at least a minute
through today and possibly
tomorrow.
Rutland's water went off Friday
and was put back Into service just
yesterday.
EPA recommends boiling as a
precautionary measure since the
water pressure was completely oH
for a considerable length of time.

A judgment of $33,677.11! has been
granted the Federal National Mort·
gage Association IIi an action
against Carl Schultz Jr., deceased,
et ai, for property In Racine VIllagE'.
U judgment remains unpaid, thl'
property wlll be foreclosed.

1

"''·

Residents urged
to boil water

Judgment granted

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&gt;:

Meigs County happenings ....
Emergency squads
answer five calls

r-1

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Pomeroy Area Chamber cl Commerce mern!Jiirs meeting Tuesday
enjoyed a Christmas treat In the
form of entertainment by the .
Southern High School Show Choir
under the direction of Roberta
Maidens.
The choir presented a 20-minute
program to the group following the
regular business meeting and
luncheon at the Ohio Power clflce. ·
Appointed as new members of
chamber's board of directors were
Bill Nease, Bruce Reed, Mary
Powell, Paul Stmon and Paul
Gerard. Till' new members wUI
serve on the board with current
members Joe Clark, Ron Ash, Tom
Reed, Jennifer Sheets- and Hank
Cleland.
Joe Clark, as prt'Sident of the
Bend Area MPrchants Association,
reported to the group that the Dec.1
open house in Pom('J'oy was
successlu I. Clark commended the
Pomeroy Fire Department for Its
assistance that day In cleaning the
parking lot as flood waters receded.
Clark also suggested the posslbllty
of having next year's Christmas
parade on the Sunday of the qJm
house.
.
lt was announced by Cham!ier
President Ron Ash that member·
ship dues are payable at this time to
Sherry'Clark, chamber secretary.
Ash also announced that Pomeroy
shoppers may enjoy a two-hour
limit tree parking from now unW
Christmas. Ash was asked by
Mayor Richard Seyler tn make the
announcement.
Chamber member :Sill Kennedy
updated the group on Scipio Energy
Associates .
Welcomed to chamber wasM&amp;M
Medical Equjpment, lllc., a new
Pomeroy business.

had been feared by customers.
The Public UtUltles Commission
of Ohio Tuesday granted the
telephone company a $65.8 million
rate increase for Its 2.2 million
customers, but the monthly res!den·
tlal rate will rtse by only 3 percent,
from $14.95to$15.45,1nsteadofthe30
percent requested.
The DI'W rates will take effect as
soonasBellfllesrevlsedtarlffswlth .
the . PUCO and notifies Its

.......

customers.
"This very small Increase in
rfionthly phone charges Is In keeping
with our efforts to moderate utUlty
rates In general, " said Thomas V.
Chema, chairman of the PUCO.
"We're disappointed at the
amount approved," said Ohio Bell's
David Kandel. "The commission
granted only $65.8mli1Uon ofthl'$135
mUllon requi'Sted."
To keep residential rates low, the

EN'IERTAINERS-Membenol!lo!uthemJIIIhSchool'aSbowCholr
were • fiDe .,nn ~ aftenlooa u IIIey pa ented a.........,,.,
JII'OII'IIIIoiiiOIIIMddllacetomembenolthePomeroy AreaChliilberol
CGmlnerce. '11te.~ fonned ..,Up, liiider the c11rec11on of Roberta
Mllde111, will perfonn Dec. l'l', 8 p.m., at 8.H.S. Memben of ihe &amp;rOUP

commission ordered that the first
$45 mllllon of the additional money
he raised through hikE'S in various
service charges, Including an Increase from seven to eight cents per
call on message rates for buslni'Ss.
Dialing Information wUJ cost .lJ
cents per call Instead of 25 cents '
after five free monthly calls. Rates
wlll Increase ftlr private line
services and operator assistance for
breaking Into telephon e

conversations.
There will be no IIicrease in the flat
rate on buslni'Ss telephone servll'l",
the PUCO said.
"The effort here was to keep
rt'S(dentlal rates as iowas possible,"
saldChema.
"It's important to start pullinglhe
cost on people who use the system
rather than spreading It across the
board," agreed Commissioner Glo·
riaL. Gaylord.

Include, left to rtpt In front, Tara Wolfe, Mike Wolford, Racllelle Davh,
Carillsa 1llU, MOidea IIDl and lll'uce Wolfe; second row, Teresa Shuler,
Mel VanMeter, Becky VanMeter, Paula WinebrEnner, Ryan Ollver,
Tracy lleepe ll1d Usa Plll'ltns; lblrd row, Jlerri BeecJe, Karla Smith,
ScoU McPhail, Diana Simpeon lllld Klm Adams.

The commission allowed Bell a
12.22 percent rateofretum, which It
said reflects the bellefthattheutlllty
provides quality phone service to
customers.
"This Is the best Bell order' we
have seen," said Consumers' Coun·
sel WllllamA. Spratley, whosaldhis
agency has been through ftve Ohio
Bell rate hike requi'StS.

Additional
assistance
announced
COLUMBUS, Ohio - A funding
program Is being I'Stabllshed by
Columbia Gas of Ohio to help
low-lricome customers pay hom!'·
heating bills this wlriter.
The fund will be started with
$50,!00 donilled by Columbia. The
company Is asking customers to
participate by making donations.
Every dollar donated by a customer
wUI be matched by two dollars
contributed by the company.
All or I he funds will be handed over
to the Salvation Army which will
admlrilster the program ror needy
gas customers.
"Oursharehold~rs wUI provide as
much as $100.1XXl to match the
donation made by our customers,
employees and others," a Columbia
Gas spoki'Sman said.
Distribution of the money to
customers who cannot pay their
Columbia bills wUI begin IIi
January.
"We're very pleased that Columbia Gas has chosen to lricrease Its
program of home- heating assist·
anee for the needy du ling the
winter," Maj. Howard Evans,
divisional commander of the
southwest Ohio Salvation Army.
"Last year we worked In cooperation with Columbia to distribute
grants to about 2,500 Ohio bouse·
holds who were having trouble
financially, " he said. "Wehopetobe
able to help many famllii'S In this
area to meet the cost of staYing . '
warm this season."

.

�Pom!ll'oy-Middleport, Ohio

Commenta
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The Daily Sentinel
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• DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

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.. LET"TERS OF OPIN ION are wel&lt;'ome. They shou ld be less than 300 words
kmg. All lett en are subjccl to tldltlng and mus1 be signed with name. addreu and
t#-lf'Phon~ number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In

aood taste, addressing Issues, not personall11es. ·

•

Shakeout under way
ih telecommunications
Slfice the breakup of AT&amp;T some 2,00J equipment manufacturtng and
interconnect firms havP sprung up, each vying for a market that an
inclistry spokesman says has become so competitive a massive shakeout
Is titevttable.
fact, the shakeout Is occurring right now and only the strongPst and
tlq!e that can stay abreast fl. thP rapldlychanglngtechnology In the highly
sopl)lstlcated field of telecommunications will survive," said Howard A.
Laffler, president of Walker Telecommunications Corp. of Hauppauge,
N.T:
. '"The market has become extremely complicated and is governed to a
gniQt extent by the price structure and product Innovations," said La!fler,
w~was In Dallas recently to attend thP mnvmtlon of the North American
Te~nununlcatlons Assoc.
''The shakeout is affecting everybody. There is a shakeout In the number
of : manufacturers who are providing telephone equipment to the
in~rconnect Industry and a simUar shakeout In thP interconnect
ofllllnlzatlons as they compete within the local market area.
lqterconnect companies design and Install telecommunications
equlpmmt at various businesses. Titese !InnS act as the Intermediary
~n equlpment manufacturers )5ike Walker Telecommunications and
the&gt;md-users.
1Jialker Telecommunleations, which makes business and advanced
co~unicatlons equipment. itself is a product of thP post-AT&amp;T
divestiture. Its stocks are traded over the counter.
ftirpugh product innovations and prudent management, the company
has·more than doubled Its earnings In thP past two years and expects its
1~ sales to be higher than its 1981 total a $25.9 mllllon. It now ranks 13th
among INC. Magazine's 100 fastest growing companies In the country.
· ·!Most of the growth has come In thP last three years slncethP break up a
A'I:&amp;T," he said. "These companies literally have grown from a cottage
inctJstry to a very large operation mainly because it Is now possible for
evety customer to own the communication equipment as opposed to
ren1Jng it prior to the AT&amp;T breakup.
~Oilly those manufacturers who can provide the most up-to- date
t~logy with full system features at the most reasonable price wUI ,
survive. Whm you talk a a telephone now, you are talking about a very
htihty advanced system. It has become a major investment and the
cuitomer gets an lnvestmmt tax crlldit.
Is absolutely imperative," he said •. "that the system have very low
malntmance cost. In the last couple of years, thP cost of owning and
pperatlng a telephone system has dropped some 40 percent to~ percent.
Wllh the entry of other common carriers like MCI and Sprtnt, your long ·
.diSJBilre charges also have been considerably reduced."
ba!Cer said new products with new featureS are coming on thP market
~iry day and no doubt they create a lot of confusion among thP ]Xlblle.
"BJit within the Industry, that Is what you need In order to survive," he said.
VSimliarly In the Interconnect sector, thP companies that provide the
hi81Jest level of support and service In the local market place will be the
wiOners on the homefront. As In the computer fteld, thP service sector is
i:D~g to lie one of the critical areas of development."
balDer said the entire market Is lnOuenced by stiff competition from
fmi!ign manufacturers, especially Japan, Korea and Taiwan. He said
ill1&gt;0rts account for as much as ~ percent of the market In tre United
States.

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officials

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At a roast of Jesse Helms the
otrer day, Sen. Robert Dole bad his
usual droll time. He warmed up by
saying that when Jesse was hom,
there was a custody fight between
his father and motrer. "They both
lost: They bad to brtng up Jess."
Warmed up, Mr. Dole announced
that he h&amp;d just reeelved a bulletin:
"Jesse, I just learned that CBS has
houghI North carolina.'' The wisecrack played on several tremes.
One of them, of murse, thP
emergenoe of Senator Helms as thP
HUI's principal defender ri. tre
tobacco Industry.
You can't open the paper without
a fresh tobacco story to read. In
Chicago, a $5 million verdict In .
favor of Viceroy cigarettes against
a broadcaster who Ubeled · the
clgarl'tte company bY suggesting
that It was attempting to seduce
young smokers by ]Xlttlng cigarette

smoking up there with the jlys of Constitution?" Uis polnJ being that
booze, drugs and lapsed virginity. thP freedom of t)le press protects
In Dallas, never mind rugged
the tobacco Industry's rights to
Texas Individualism and ambient advertise its products, never mind
conservatism, a new code: From that In 1m that rtght was withnow on, any restaurant that sEBts drawn In respect of advertising
more than ~ people will have to cigarettes INer radio and televlskm.
separate sections tor those who
For many people who try to sort
smoke.
out thPir attitude on the general
There are.at least two lawsuits In !llbject, selt-iitamlnatton Is In
progress against cigarette compan- order. In my own family, the
les by famUy survivors of dead opposition to smoking by my
smoker, the allegation being, of strong·wWed father was uncom·
course, that the death; usually bY promising. The net effect: sevm ri.
lung cancer, was the result of the his 10 cliUdren took up smoking. My
carcinogenic factories In North own addiction was so fervmt that I
Carollna that cheerfully market a found myself regulating my llle
killer drug.
with prtmary emphaSis on expand·
A law Is proposed in Congress lng furtive opportunities to smoke,
that would Dally forbid any adver· at school and at home. At age 26, on
tlsing anywhere for cigarettes. The New Year's Day, my wife and I
dumtounded reaction of arepresen· . woke with awful cigarette hangov·
tative from the Tobacco Insdtute ers, and spontaneously swore ·Off
was, "Do ti!Py propose to fel)eal the jointly: New Year's pledge.

a

ert-A c!)IQBs' FOilr w~ m~·'laBifUIM..-.

kiiLME

NE&gt;\

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SOCIETY of

INTERNATIONAL

E

"I have a feeling I should' seek asylum, but I've lost track of which side I'm
on."

mterv~ew

Faust ·

Twenty·four boors without tohacco
and we had become so Irritable that
It seemed clear that one of us should
resume smoking If ony to save our
marriage. We flipped a coin, and
she won/lost, you name It, because
sliP mntlnues to smoke, and I
kicked the habit. Along with, If one
reads thP statistics accurately, 30
mUllan other Americans (of my
own siblings, the last one stopped
smoking only a few weeks ago).
The anti-smoking pressure, If the
metaphor doesn't otfend, has
reached epidemic levels. The tig·
ures released last week show that
lung cancer In men has declined for
the first time In ~ years. Over the
past two decades, white male
smokers declined from 52 percent
I
to 30 percent of the population.
Unhappily, there has not been a
corresponding decrease among
women (only 3 percent); and, sure
enough, there are corresponding
differences In deaths from lung
cancer. The situation among black
men and women Is discouraging:
They are smoking up a storm.
Has ti!P time come, then, for new
national policies on the subject?
Since CBS has purchased North
Carolina, It might proceed to close
do1111 thP tobacco farms: That
would be one extreme. The COn·
gress could, one supposes, give to
the Food and Drug Administration
authority to ban the sale of
cigarettes. One would not much
care to he a congressman who had
to wte on any such proposal as that.
Well; short of proscription, where
might we go?
In my own view, nowhere. As
Individuals, ex-smokers should accept thP missionary obligation of
ex-alcoholics. (A solecism there:
we are told there Is no such thing as
an "ex-alcoholic," there are only
"reformed" alcoholics.) And prl·
vate associations oriented to health
should keep up the heat.
·

Coast Guard drug battle Jack Anderson &amp; ~ale VanAtta
WASHINGTON - The COast
Guard Is between thP devU and the
deep blue sea: At thP very time the
Senate Is trying to cut S2.'Kl miillon
from lfs budget, the service Is being
asked to take an even bigger role In
the government's war against drug
smugglers.
Budget restraints have already
rendered thP COast Guard's Interception patrols so scattered and
predictable that only the most Inept
or careless smugglers have serious
touble avoiding too cutters and
aircraft on their appointed rounds.
The Transportation Department
Inspector general reported a year
ago that "predictable or detectable
operating methods rendered pa·
trois ineffective." COast Guard
officials say steps are belngtakm to
change that.
But at least some of too COast
Guard's financial shortfall can be
laid at the service's own door. Over
thP past eight years It has spmt $269
million oot of Its rrodest buq:ets for
a fleet of 41 Falcon jet aircraft that

have proved highly unreliable. Our
associates Donald Goldberg and
Corky Johnson pieced togeti!Pr the
Falcon fiasco from a series a
audits, memos and Internal reports
by the inspector general.
One problem Is almost IDibelleva·
ble. "The entire Oeet of 41 Falcon
jets was purchased without sufficient testing of p-ototypes1o obtain
reasonable assurance of thP aircraft's performance and reliabU·
lty," an IG report notes, adding this
understated reproof: "Procurtng a
total fleet of aircraft with unprovm
engines is not a sound procurement
practice."
So the Coast Guard learned the
hard way that tlie jet engines,
manufactured by Garrett Corp. of
Phomlx, Artz., had a few bugs, So
many, in fact, that an alarming
number of the planes were in the
repair shop Instead ot on patrol
durtng too 18-month pertod from
1983-84 studied by thP Inspector
general.
"For example," the Investigators

reported, "at Air Station Cape Cod,
each of its tour aircraft had one or
more periods that the aircraft was
rot operationally ready for two to
lour consecutive months. At Air
Station Miami" -thP hub of the
anti-smuggling ertort - "six of its
10 aircraft were not operationally
ready for two to five consecutive

months."
Insiders leU us the problem is stUI
just as serious. Late last month,
only two of Miami's 10 Falcon jets
were avaUable for missions.
Th~ continuing unreliability has
been more than just a logistical
I!Padache for thP schedule makers.
It has made it virtually impossible
to complete the testing of an
Infrared device called Alreye,
which is supposed to help locate the
"rnotherload" ships that bring
drugs to offshore rendezvous with
smaller boats.
The trouble Is that It takes about
two days to switch thP Aireye from
me plane to another, and that's too
ion~ to have one of only two flyable

•
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T. 0 d ay In )story
t9cta.y

t

not happen in Guatemala. The mlli·
bloOdy and prolonged civil war.
A more recent one is Argentina, tary has the front-runner's pledge that
where the military so disgraCed itself there will be no post mortems of the
In the Falklands war with Britain that Argentine type. The past will remain
it is for the moment ·hors de combat past and·the dead wiU stay buried.
politically. Even so, President Raul
There are repor~ that, just to make
Alfonsln is encountering tough going certain, soldiers and pollee personnel
in calling to account officers guilty of involved in death squads, who could
human rlgbts abuses In the six yean of
military government terror.
Then there Is Costa Rica, often cited
as the region's shining example. It ·
wasn't always. Costa Rica often had
suffered along with Its neighbors until
a 1948 civil war, after which the army
was abolished. A stunning move most of ali because the civilian leadership managed to get away with it.

limit Quantities

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPI)Gerry Faust, who resigned under
pressure as football coach at Notre
. Dame for falling to produce a
consistmt winner, Tuesday Inter·
viewed for the head coaching job at
Marshall.
Marshall Is looking to replace
Stan Parrtsh, wbo left after putting
together a 13·8-1 record in two
seasons to become head coach at
Kansas State.
"! didn't want anyone to know I
was here, butlt kindofslippedoutof
the bag," Faust told The Parthenon,
the Marshall s!udent newspaper,
when reached at Tri-State Airport in
Huntington.
''Let's just say I wouldn't be here If
I wasn't impressed with the
university.
"! think you have a great
president and he Is going to do great
things for the school."
Faust arrived on campus about
noon and left at abOut 5:30p.m.
"He talked with · the search
conunlttee. He talked with, of
course, Athletic Director (David)
Bralne, and he met with President
(Dale) Nitzschke," said C.T. Mit·
cheli, director of university relations. "And there was a little social
gati!Prlng with some community
people at Nitzschke's home this
afternoon."
Mitchell said Faust also toured
Marshall's a thietlc facilities.
"The just had discussions,"
Mitchell said.· 'I don't think anybody
reached any resolution on elti!Pr
side at this point.
"! don't think he was offered the
job. I think they just had some
discussions about it. That is not to
say he won't be offered it."
Mitchell said the deadline for
applying for the job Is Dec. 18. He
said he didn't know how many
candidates had been Interviewed.
Faust, who compUed a 3().26-1
record at Notre Dame and was a
highly successful high school coach
in Cincinnati, also reportedly has
been considered for coaching va·
cancles at Youngsto1111 State and
Mississippi State.

ALL GAME.'!

w

TEAM

Hannan Trace
Southern
NorthGa!Ua
Synunes Valley
OakHlil
Southwestern
Eastern
Kyger Creek

L Pel.

5 0 1.000
4 0 1.000
3 1 .7~
2 2 .500
1 3 .250
I 3 .250
1 3 .250
0 4 .000

STORt MOtmS'
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunda'y 10 AM-10 PM

298 SE,COND ST .
POMEROY •. OH. · .
PRICES EFFECUff lHRU SAtURDAY, _NOV. 14, 1985

GRADE A

Whole Chicken.L:·•••• 49(

1/4

39
Pork Loin.: ••'~••• $1

HOMEMADE
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

LB

Chuck Roast •••••·•••
U.S.D.A. CHOICE .

.

$l 69
.

$

Round Steak ••••L:·••• ·

.

..

LB.

Pork Sausage ;,. •••••

Sll 9

19 9

WILSON'S SAVORY

Bacon •.••••••.•••.••L:·••••

SVAC
Team
Hannan Trace
Southern
North Gallla
SymmesVailey
Oak Hill
Southwestern
Eastern
Kyger Creek

W L Pet.
4 0 1.000
4 0 1.000
3 I .750
2 2 .500
I 3 .250
1 3 .250
I 3 .250
0 4 .000
Tuesday's games
Hannan Trace 58 Oak Hlll43
Southern 84 North Gallla 60
Eastern 75 Kyger Creek 34
Symmes Valley 62 Southwestern

JONATHAN, MciNTOSH,
RED or GOLDEN DELICIOUS

Apples ••••••••••••••••••• 99&lt;
BROUGHTON
$14
9·
:
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
5 LB. BAG

47
Friday's games

implicate those higher up who gave
the orders, are being killed. Numbers
of bodies with faces mutilated and
hands cut off have been turning up.
Keep that in mind when Washington
tells you what a giant step toward de·
mocracy has been taken.

Southern at. Hannan Trace
North Gallla at Oak Hill
Kyger Creek at Symmes Valley
Eastern at Southwestern

•

GALLON

The Daily Sentinel

PARKAY

(USPS ti$-Mll

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A Division ot Multimedia, Inc.

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday , 111 Court St., Po·
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Pom&lt;roy. Ohio 4~769. Ph. !192·2156. S.·

Berry's World

Armies are the scourge of Latin
America. Rarely are they needed to
fight each other. Their true enemies
are internal - their own people, or
any among them who would change
the existing order or challenge autonomous power and prerogatives of the
mllltary leadership.
The armies have demonstrated, and
are demonstratin,, that - In Guatemala, where political murders and
kidnappings are estimated at 38,000;
and In Argentina, Urucuay. El salva·
daor and Chile. With defenders like
these, what country needl external
enemies?
For all the · periodic talk of ambl·
tious new Marshall Plan·type programs, the most direct and lmmedl·
ately effective asaault on Latin
America's chronic mllerles would be
to Implement the Costa Rican solution
regionwlde.
'
That, however, Is probably the last
thing to expect. It may not even last in
Costa Rica, which is under heavy pressure from the Nicaraguan confronta·
lion and Washington to reconsider its
army·lesa state.
It is already very clear that It can-

We Reserve The Right To

SVAC
standings

Falcons out of service.
In addition, an "unreaSonably
hlgb faUure rate of components has
resulted In a stgnjflcant shortage of
certain critical spare parts," investigators reported, adding: "Mean·
while, extensive cannibalization
has continued In an eHort to keep
Ire Falcon jets Dying. At various air
stations, caMiballza tlon was so
severe that some Falcon jets were
used strictly for spare parts."
Why not put In new engines? This
woold "be very costly; and is out of
thP question," a Coast Guard memo
·states flatly. In fact, replacing the
hoti!Prsome engines would cost
about $.nl mUIIon, or more than the
entire original cost of tlie Falcon
Oeet.
The Coast Guard, Falcon and
G~rrett have been working on the
problems, but so far without
success. "The problems with the
mgines wUI prohably take years to
resolve, If ever," the Inspector
~neral predicted.

Enemies withinL__________D_on_c..:._,.,:.::!.:!.,.aff
By the lime you read this, Guatema·
Ia will have elected a new president.
As it is being written, before the
Dec. 8 run-off, the winner is not cer·
taih. But it doesn't much matter, even
though on paper there would appear to
· be significant differences between the
candidates. The front-runner is crili·
cal of U.S. policies in Central Amerl·
ca. His rival would ' cozy up to
Washington.
·
Or so they say. But neither, in any
case, can have the final say. Whatever
happens on Dec. 8, power In Guatemala will remain in the hands that now
hold it - the Guatemalan army's.
Neighboring Honduras also has a
new president, after a spot of pre-elec·
lion confusion. 'Ihe incumbent wanted
to rewrite the constitution to pennit
hirri another term. The anny chief to.ld
'
him to knock it off and get on with the
,•
vote.
Dependably, Washington is hailing
both elections as encouraging steps in
the spread of democratic rule
throughout the hemisphere. In )loth
1s Wednesday, Dec. 11, the 345th day of 1985 with ~ to A&gt;llow.
cases, for example, civilians are mov·
Tile moon b almost new.
ing Into the presidential palaces.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and saturn.
But both cases are deceiving. They
are not steps toward democracy but
ne evening star Is Jupiter.
perversions of democracy. Soldiers re• TQose bOrn on this date are under the sign a Sagittarius. They Include main the real rulers. There will be no
~r Hector Berfioz In 1.803, New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia In
changes without their approval. Which
1882; Soviet novelist Alexander Solzhenltsyn In 1918 (~~ge 67), actress Rita means there wUI be no significant
MOIS!no in 1931 (age 54). country singer Brenda Lee In 1944 (age 41), and changes. The Honduran business is
rock sbtger Jermaine Jack'!(ln In 1954 (age 31) .
only paradoxical proof of that basic
oft this date tr. history:
truth.
J
t ked Pe 1Ha bo Ge
d
And It Is true, with very few excep!te
IrL 1941, four days a r apan· ll tac
ar
r r, rmany an
lions, throughout Latin America.
Itali declared war on the United States.
When tbe soldiers give up power, It Is
In 1972, Apollo-17 astronauts Gene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt landed for cosmetic purposes - not least of
on the moon for a three-day exploration.
·
them to put on a better face for Wash·
, In.1983, 30,000 womm tried to rtp down fences around a U.S. cruise lngton. The soldiers remain the powln~S411e base at Greenham Common, f'.,;Jand.
en behind the presidents, who know
Itt1981 a nativity was scme displayed uear the White House for thP first •. they can be replaced If they displease
• ......:.,
rts rd red 11 removed in 1973.
and . who
follow
Instructions
time ... .._~ cou 0 e
accordmgly.
A;thought for the day: ~York Mayor Fiorello La~uardla, ~~ble to
Mexico has lo~g been the outstand·
llefl:!ld an appointee, said When I make a mistake, Hsa beaut!
ing exception, but at the. cost of a

•

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Let the smokers be _____w_i_uia_m_F_._Buc_k_ley_Jr.

·:m

:tt

Marshall

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Wednesday. December 11. 1985
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Outside Ohio
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••
•
•

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

P&amp;ge-4-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Decembe! 11, 1985

Wednesday, December 11 , 1985

Andujar, Virgil, Bedrosian _swapped at winter meeting
SAN DIEGO (UP! ) - Joaquin
Andujar, who raised a fUss In the
final game of the World Series,
Tuesday Interrupted the calm of the
winter meetings and set off a flum
ottrades.
The Dominican right. bander, an
unwanted hurler despite recording
41 victories the last two seasons for
the Cardlnals, was shipped to
OaklandforcatcherMike Heathand
lett-handerTim Conroy.
The deal, the llrst major transaction of the annual winter gathering,
triggered two others in a span oft'MJ
hours.
Atlanta ae&lt;julred All-Star catcher
Ozzte VirgU and right-handed pros·
peel Peter Smith from Philadelphia
for rlght·ha!lder Steve Bedrosian

and outfielder MUt Thompson.
The Red Sox then sent righthanded reliever Mark Clear to
Milwaukee for middle Infielder Ed
Romero.
Boston and Milwaukee had been
talking with the Chicago White Sox
on a deal that would have sent Tom
Seaver to Boston.
The deal collapsed when Boston
manager John McNamara refUsed
to part with reliever Bob Stanley.
However, Boston executive Lou
Gorman said hls club remains
interested In Seaver, and left an
offer on the table.
The Pblllles may not be finished,
either. Accordlng to sources, they
are seeking to send fanner Cy
Young Award winner John Denny to

Cincinnati for outfielder Gary
Redus.
The Whlte Sox spent Tuesday
night talking with the Yankees
about a deal that ~rould Include
Carlton Fisk of Chicago and Don
Baylor, Ron Hassey and Rich Bordl
ol New York. New York owner
George Steinbrenner arrived at the
meetings Tuesday.
Today, an.owners' meeting Is set
for an undisclosed location In San
Diego. Topics range from expansion, ownershlp Issues in San
Francisco, Pittsburgh and Cleveland to the use of the designated
hitter In the World Series.
A speech by Commissioner Peter
Ueberroth and the annual majorleague draft generated some Interest early Tuesday, but the Andujar
deal Itt the hot stove for the first time
1ft the lim-day-old meetings.
The hard-throwing Andujar was
21-121astyearbutwon justooegame

the last two rmnths. He was
mentioned In the PittsbUrgh drug

the lEal.

"We didn't decide right after the
season we were going to rmve this
guy or that guy," he said.
Issue.
Conroy wUJ receive a chance to
Andujar Is suspended for t.he first gain a starting berth while Heath Is
10 games of the 1986 season for an expected to become St. Louts'
escapade In tre Series.
starting catcher.
In Game7 titheevenl\lalll.&lt;Jloss
The Braves acquired the catcher
to Kansas City, Andujarwasejected they wanted as welt. Sorely needing
for arguing two pitches that were another offensive player to protect
called balls. He had to be restrained Dale Murphy and Bob Horner In the
and pushed til the field as nnllllo~ lineup, Atlanta lan!Ed Virgil to rui
an obvious dellcency.
.
watched on televlsk&gt;n.
"We came with the pul]lOS€ of
Rick Cerone and Bruce Benedict, ·
adding to the top of our rotation," · Atlanta's catchers last year, batted
said Oakland general manager .216 and .:112 respectively. VIrgil hit
Sandy Alderoon. "We have made 19 homers last season.
Inquiries both In St. Louis and other . "Wefeltweneededtoflllaposltlon
sources, and we're tully confident that needs fixing," said new Braves
that Joaquin can be a quality general manager Bobby Cox. "We
citizen."
felt VIrgil was the best catcher oo the
Cardinals GM Dal Maxvtll denied marketploce."
that pressure forced him to make
Philadelphia president Blll Giles
trial thls summer and may lace
punishment from Ueberroth on that

DEER KILL - Two Homer Hill resldenls of Meigs CGUM)I baged
deer close to their homes. TheyareBradScbwenk,leli, wllhhls 170pound
elghl polnl buck, and Michael Kindy, wllh his 150 powld 10 polnl buck.

Southern dumps
NG Pirates, 84-60
BY SOO'JTWOLFE
VINTON- Continuing Its blitzing
ttfenslve tempo, the rampaging
SouthernTomacloesolCoachHowie
Caldwell rolled over the North
Gallla Pirates ~ here Tuesday
evening at North GaU!a to rema in
undefeated at 4.() both inside the
SVAC and In overall play.
Southern placed 12 men in the
scoringcolumnand...asledbyTodd
Adams with 16 points and 6 steals,
Jay Bostick with 15, Kenny Turley
11, Davi:l Anoburgey 9, and Jamie
Hensler8.
Todd Holstein led all scorers with
22 points.
Both teams went Into the contest
urv:!efeated and both were known for
their powerfUl, but different !)rands
of Offensive basketball.
Taking advantage of a successful
fast break and Intense lull court
press, Southern controlled the
tempo of the game !rom the onset,
taking a 17-10 !lrst period lead.
As ttsgrindingfloorgame started
to take its toll on the hustling, but
weary Pirates, Southern crept to a
decisive advantage. One key in the
game· according to Coach Caldwell
was the four or five consecutive
!turnovers by North Gallla in the
second frame. During this time
Southern's defense was at Its best,
capitalizing on the Pirate miscues to
buDd a 34-141ead before cooling off
and allowing the scrappy Pirates to
pull back to within 12 at the
conclusion of the first half. The
scoreboard lit up to thetuneofa 36-24
with Southern In charge.
A relatively even third period
developed as NG adjusted well, but
coui:l not gain any ground on the
Tornadoes. Overall. the sticky

· Southern defense grabbed 17 steals,
lntlm.tdatlng the Pirates to the point
of a deliberate offensive attack, the
score 57-41 after three periods.
Keeping a fresh line-up on the
court at all times, Southern delivered the !lnal blow with a 27-13
fourth quarter bombardment, the
final being 84-60.
Coach Caldwell said, "Tonight we
played our best game of the year.
Our defense was really good and we
were very, very Intense! We're
geitlng better every game. Our
Intensity was one of the keys to the
game and we hit the boards much
better tonight."
Southern hit 31 of 87 field goals for
35.6 percent and canned 22of 33from
the line, lncludlngan1Hor-8effortby
Jamie Hensler.NG hll20of56for 35.7
percent and canned ro of 23,
Including 12 of 12 by Todd Holstein.
Southern had 45 r.ebourv:ls,led by
Turley with 13 and Anoburgey 6,had
17 steals,two assists, 17 1\lmovers,
and 18 fouls.
NG had 39rebounds, Kemper with
11 and Holstein 10; bad 3 steals,I
asslst,28 tumovers,and 23 fouls.
Southern won the reserve contest
50-38 after leading 25-10 at the
hal!.Shawn
led with
14,
ShannonCunningham
Riffle 12, and
Tim
Gllbri:le 10. RustyDenney andSteve
George had 14 and 11 respectively
for NG.

BY SCOOT WOLFE
. EASTMEIGS - Breaklngal6-16
deadlock In the second period, the
Eastern Eagles outscored' visiting
Kyger Creek 1!Hl during the !lnal
three minutes ol tre halt enroute to a
lopsided 75-38SVAC victory over the
Bobcats here Tuesday evening In
boys' high school basketball action. ·
Eastern posted Its first victory,
whlle Kyger Is stUJ winless at 0-4.
Five Eagles hit the double-figure
plateau and a sixth came close.
Junior guard Eddie Collins paved
the way with an outstanding 17 point
effort, Jeff Caldwell added 15, Greg
Leachman 12, Bryan Durst 10,
Kevin Barber 10, and Tone Chapman9.
Riehle Gilmore paced Kyger
Creek with 13 markers, while Mike
Bradbury and Tim Gordon each .
added6.
During a slow, but Inconsistent
first period Eastern held a sllm14-10
lead as oophomore point guard Jeff
Caldwell put EHS on the board first
with a short jumper.RlchleGllmore
knotted the score at 2-2 nearly two
minutes later.
Although Eastern's offense
wasn't quite up to par, Coach Scott
Stemple's Bobcats played a spirited
and aggressive first half that made
quite a game of It In the early going.
Eastern, meanwhile, was utllizlng a
deliberate offense, working pa·
tiently for the good Inside shot.
Chapman, Collins, Barber, and
Leachman each took turns In the

scoring parade.
One successful Kyger Creek
strategy was Its changing of

Hendi;ix had 15 and Michael Martin
s.'Garretthad5forKygerCreek.

defenses nearly every trlpdownthe
floor, often using a 2-1-2 wneafter a
Score and a man·to-man In other
sll\lations.
The Bobcats held tough untO the
latter stages of the second frame,
when after an EHS time out the

YOUR IN. DEPENDENT "
"'"'""""'"""·To"' Ch"'""" ....,.J•N c''"'"' · AGENTS SERYI NG
""'"' ""'"""""·.......,.,_,.
..... "'""'- Rl"'~ 011 """Brad!Jlry
~'·"· ""''"
MEIG· S COUNyY
l-0-6Jcl..,.
,nm
'"'"""' m, BillY L""""'"' 1"t Mike ......... ....,c.
SINCE 1868
!
~:~~Y=~·~~J.().2. LandonO.l-l ,
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. :. ~

INSURANCE

Eastern
14 17 11 27-'r.'i
Ky...- """'
10 ' ' 13-.l l
- - E d Col11.-. 0t·11)1mCok!w« I1-1&gt;2,G""'

&amp;J.15,Bryan Dursr

~10.

Kt&gt;Yln Barber

~10.

executing Its offense to perfection
and getting a strong bo9st !rOll) Its
running game. Eastern outscored
us foe 17·9 1n the third canto and
blazed to a 27·13 fourth period
advantage to claim the 75-38. ·
Eastern had a red-hot 35of 63nlght
from the floor for 56 percent, whlle
canning 5 of II at the tine. Kyger
managed 14 of 45 attempts for 31
percent, while netting 8 of 12 !rom
the charity stripe.
Eastern grabbed 50 rebounds, led
by Leachman with 13 and Barber's
nine. KC had 36 while being led by
Gilmore with 7and Bradburywith6.
Eastern had 17 steals, 16 turnovers, 17 assists,and 13 fouls. KC had 6
steals, ll turnovers, 6 assists, and 14
fouls.
In the reserve contest Eastern
easUy claimed a 64-16 triumph over
the Bobklttens. At halftime, Coach
Don Eichinger's Eagles led by a
whopping 51-3 margin. Mark Grilrln
scored a game-high 18 points, Tony

and

2-l}t, Todd Hudson 1.0.2. Ml~

+ ..-.+ + 0 C,·

l· •

$PEC/Al OF TI/E WEEK

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PIZZA BURGER

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99C

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.-.'."
..
'
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.With Frits .................. S1,49

ADOLPH'S

DAIRY VALLEY

POMEROY, OH.

~-

.....••
·~

PH.992-2556

. o•~••~+oo

RUT LAN D

DEPARTMENT STORE
PHil:~

Phone 742-2100

mf:t:TIVl THilU SAT. OEC. 14. 1985
••

12 OZ. COLUMBIAN VAC PAC

JACKSONVll.LE - Meigs' unde- raudersarenow5-0overalland4-0in
feated reserve put three men In theTVC. Trlmblefallsto1-4overall
double !lgures In racing toa55-34 win and 0-41n the league.
over the Trimble reserves here
Tuesday.
Scott Williams led Meigs with II
whlle Bill Brothers and Robb
Harrison each scored ,10. Chris
Spain led Trimble with eight. ·
Coach Mlck Childs' Little Ma·

SLICED BACON ....................... 79c

""'"'.,.'
""" c.u.,.
Bukrl:hall R8ultA

., u.... ,.,.,.,.,..,..,......

""""""""
"'· '" ""'"
Xavltor !tl. "'Eastffn
Mlch Sl
Cfld arvill• 116. wn mlnftlon 76

OPEN FOR BUSINESS
"Service Calls are Being
Taken Care Of"
MONDAY THRU fRIDAY
9 A.M. nL 5 P.M.

"''
"""' " · Polm p,.., ,p,."
Wals h !16. Franklin 62

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OVER 20 MILLION SOLD WORLDWIDE

...

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ECKRICH

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JUMBO BOLOGNA .........L\••$1.69
SUPERIOR
BOILED HAM.w~PPIMiriUt...». $2.19
HOMEMAH
·
HAM SALAD ...................lA-...... 99&lt;

HUDNALL'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Ohio scores

·~
t

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SPREAD
MARGARINE ........l~A s1.19
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lB. KRAn PIOCESSID VELVEITA

CHEESE ................AOX S3.9 S

' PROCESSED
12 Ol., 16 SUCED AMERICAN

CEESE ..................!.li- S1.89
HILLENDAL£

~tM,LL

EGGS......~.PJII. S1.99

HAlJLS OOWN REBOUND - Lee Powell, U center lor lhe Meigs
Marauders comes down with an Important
during Tuesday's
TVC game at Trimble. Meigs remained Wlbealen with a &amp;1-62 victory

""'"'nd

hehlndtwofreethrowsbyRickWlselnthellnalftvesecondsolthe~e.

Vikings stop SWHS

z• cr.
HEAD
L£nUCE ....................... 69 c

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16 OZ. CELLO PACK

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CARROTS •••••••••••••••••••••• 29 c
318. NEW

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YELLOW ONIONS ......... 69&lt;
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11 OZ. IAfiQUU OR MORTON

TV DINNERS ................... u. $1,29
32 OZ. ORE-IDA CIINKU CUT
FRENCH FRIES ••••••••••••.•• Mi. $1, S9

NORm GALIJ..\ - W a~·nr Dlti:lll' :\.2-R. Todd
1/ol,lri n .'I- 12·22.Paul i..efo 0.2 ·2.Todd Dm 2.o.4.Mikl&gt;
GlaMb.J m2.().4.S!('Y(' Thaxton

.Vl · R. T~!f.-

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191f• OZ. CAMPBEU'S CHUNKY

BEAN &amp; HAM SOUP ••••••• ~M ••• 97&lt;

46 OZ. RED

HAWAIIAN PUNCH ......... ~M ... 99&lt;
17 OZ. DEL MONTE

FRUIT COCKTAIL •••••••• %.~~~. $1.79 .

This U.S. Government test proved that
Toyoslove Doubto-Cleons are the elton-

17 OZ. CAN ROYAL "INCE

_YAMS......................... %.~~~. $1.69

est burning kerosene heaters in
Amierco-10 times cleaner--reducing

16 oz.

carbon monoxide to almost zero. No
ether keorsene heoter con cloim thm.

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16 OZ. UNCU BEN'S

Oridincuy heaters increose carbon
monoxide as flame ts reduced.
• 3..,ep wick adjuster gi- 50% longer
wicklife-easy ftiOin-•. '
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16 OZ. OCEAN SPRAY WHOLE

sillage
• 5 DOUBLE CLEAN MODELS

BROWN RICE .................. Iwr.••• S9c

CRANBERRY SAUCE •••• 2.Wj~ $1.49

13 OZ. DUNCAN HEINZ

.

BUEBE_RRY MUFFIN MIX ••••• S1.39
2 LB. SHURFINE

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, WY.

WILLOW WOOD ...: Symmes 18 foul shots, for 55.6 percent. The
Valley took a 21-6 first quarter lead, Vlkll)gs ou~bounded Southwest·
buUt a 56-28 margin after three em, 52-30. Thompson · led all
quarters and held on to defeat rebounders with 11 and 1\-6 larry
Southwestern, 62-47, In an SVAC Ferris added 10 for the' Vikings.
basketball game here Tuesday.
Patrick grabbed seven caroms for
Southwestern's downfall carne at the Highlanders.
the foul line, where the Highlanders · Southwestern (1-3 overall and In
connected on only five of 24 charity the teague) wUI host Eastern
tosses tor 20.8 percent.
FI:lday, whUe Symmes Valley (2-2
"We had them in the one-and-one overall and In the league) will host
early but we just couldn't take winless Kyger Creek.
advantage," Southwestern coach
UP !IOOftl
Mike Kinnaird said. "Ten of the 19' S00111WtlSTERN
(f"J) - Jim Jrffrn 1·M. And!r'
·rree throws we missed were the llal51op 3-0.6, Ben ~ lklyd &amp;1-l l, Jolvl Wollum 4-0.ll.
Pal r1Ck f.{l-8. Rlr~ Hal'l.bp 1-02, D&lt;wt'
front ends on one-and-ones. We Denny
MlorsOOn ().(}{1, Dran McNral 1-l ·l, Rob McCJrtyo.M.
missed a possible31polntsat thefoul P..l. HaiWp I·J.i'i. 'roTAU 'IJ-HJ,
SVMMFR \lALlEY (a) - Slywsk't BJoomflt&gt;kl
line."
4&lt;\-11, Gabr&gt; Pa t tfr~n 1..(1.2. Jolln ~cppi rd 7-:2·16,
JoM Thompson led the Viking .John Thom J:Mn 9-2.'11. Mlkt' Paltrrson :H!I. L.at~·
Stolt WIII Iam5J.Q.i. TOTALS •It-a.
attack with 20 points, whUe John FPnisfi.'l-2.
!k'Gftlr,yq~
Sheppard added 16 and Slyvester Swlh ~·~l£'r n
6 Ill 12 19 -47
SymrTJ('S Vi!.l h~
'll 1~ 211 li - 62
Bloomfield 11.
Benny Boyd led the Highlanders
Southwestern-Kyger Creek Box:
with· 13 points whlle John Wollum
and Danny Patrick each added DJ'IIIWEB'IEIC.N (.tt) - Jim Jf'U('fs 2·0-4, Andy
Haislop J.H. Brnn:~:· Ibyd J.-3-9, John wonum 6-2·14.
eight.
Rlrk~· Halsl0p·H 9. TOI'A1.818-Mf.
SOuthwestern also had problems K\'GER CHEEK (D) - RICh GIJI'TICn' ~ J -11 , Keo."tn
1-1 ·3, Mlk(' Bnutl::lll"')' 1-1-3. Tim t.orct~n 4- ~
from the field, connecting on 21 or 55 .Jolko)'
on t n.·Ma~· :J..G.6. Mlkf' Reftc:ot !HI. l.('octt O-H
!leld goal attempts for 38.2percent. TOTAJ..I;l lt-5-D.
S.'Off' by q...V..
Symmes Valley made 26 of 46 field
~l h'A'1"li l£'rn
8 10 10 16- 44
goalS for 56.5 percent and only 10 of Ky~CIW'k
11 ~ 11 11 - ll

CONFECTIONERY SUGAR ••Mq. $1,19

4 ROLL PIG. CHARMIN ·

.TOILET TISSUE •••;••••••••••••no. $1.3 9

Miller 68-63, Belre edged
NelsonvUle-York 68-61, and Wellston upset Vinton County 64-49.
ME108- (6li ·Rick WISt&gt; 7..o!·ll!, Bl·atl Ro~n

2.o.c. Mlke Chancey 14·6. Shawn Baker 8-0.16, l.ftf'
Powt&gt;IIU.16.J . R. KltchenO.O.O.Huey Eason H 3, Phil
King().O(I. 'IOTAUI u.n.a.
'ftliMJIU- 162J .cbuck Da\'ls 1·S 1!'1 , Ron Hulss
l·M, Chris Kar,. 5..().10, Jefl Koons ~. T('{' Morrison
U.J-25. ror.u.sn....._

Byquanen:
Meigs

:II 15 12 1&amp;-f.:J

Trimble

IB 10 16 111-62

Deer kill placed
at 2,118,in Meigs
Ohlo hunters bagged fewer deer
this year than last according to the
Division or Wildlife of the Ohio
Department of Nalllral Resources.
Preliminary figures show that
52,488 deer were kJJied during the
six day deer gun season that ended
past Sal\lrday. This figure represenls a seven percent decrease
compared to last year's preliminary count of 56,438 during the
sa.me reporting period.
The decrease, considered lnslg·
nlflcant by wUdllfe offiCials, Is
attributed to reduced hunting pressure oo the qx'!llng day because ((
extreme cold weather. In addition
many hunters Indicated that In
some areas deer used the unusually
extensive standing corn as cover
and were not easUy hunted .
The ,most deer were taken In the
southeastern counties Included In
hunting wne four. Zone four
hunters were permitted to take
either buck or doe.
Muskln~m County led the state
with 3,072 lEer checked. Other
counties In deer zone four with
significant deer kllllnclu!E Athens

CLEVELAND (UP!) - His
critics say George Vukovich
stopped playlngbaseball last year at
·about the same time he stopped
talking to the media.
The Cleveland Indians' rlghtfielder nl"'/er cominentcd on hls
stal\ls with the club following the
All-Star break, though he bad
earlier· said he was unhappy with
manager Pat Corrales' platoon
system In the outfield.
After the final home game against
Seattle on Oct. 2, a reporter went up
to Vukovich and wished him a good
winter and oft-season.
Vukovich stared at the preoffered hand for a few seconds
before shaking it.
"Sure,

see

you/'

he

1

'J1Ie Xavier Musketeers are

"Wherever' ' may have turned out
to bealotlurthereasl than Vukovich
had Imagined.
A subject of trade rumors since
the season . ended, Vukovich was
sold by the Indians Tuesday to the
Selbu Llonso!the Japan League.
The transaction was announced at
baseball's winter meetings In San
Diego.
Vukovich's contract, which Is In
its option year, Is worl h S355,1XXl per
season. Seibu purchased Ills rights
for a reported $00,1XXl.
The 29-year-old lett-handed hal·
ter, who hlt' .244 In 149 games last
yea~ with eight homers and 45 RBI,
was platooned wiih rlght·handed
Cannen CastUio after Mel Hall was
se~sty Injured In a May 9
automobile accident.
Indians senior vice president of
baseball operations Danny O'Brien
says he Is convinced the lett-banded
Hall has luJJY recovered !rom
fractured clavicle and pelvis.
That made Vukovich expendable.
Vukovich batted a team- high .ll4
with nine homersand60 RBI in 1981,

County with 2,485 &lt;Eer checked,
Guernsey County 2,419, Meigs,
2,118, Washlni:Jon, 2,049, Tuscara was, 2,040, Coshoclan, 2,009, Perry,
1,003, Harrison, 1,&amp;12 and Knox,
l,Ql5.

Deer. wne one comprised of 32
western and northwestern counties
reported 5,519 deer taken. The top
county In zone one was Richland
County with 643 deer £hecked ln. In
wne two, comprised ol 20 southwestern counties, 3.!184 &lt;Eer were
checked in with Pike reporting 536
deer. Deer wne three consisting of
ten northeastern counties reported
2,016 deer killed with Ashtabula
CountY reporting 458 deer.
The deer longbow and crossbow
season, which was suspen!Ed
during the deer gun season, re·
mains open statewide for deer of
either sex through Jan. 31, 1986.
The statewide primitive weapons
deer season will take place Jan.
9-1l,1981i. During this season, bucks
only may be taken In deer zones ooe
and two, deer of either sex may be
taken in zones three and four.

All-Star

•

Three Browns
earn awards . .

coaches
announced
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) -The
Ohio High School Football Coaches
Association has chosen eight foot·
ball coaches from acroos the state to
head the teams tha:t wUI be selected
for the annual north-!lluth hlgh
school football game.
The association named Thorn
McDan leis of Can ton McKinley
High School head coach of the north
team and Robert Seaman ti
Worthington High School to lead the
south.
The 16 regional directors of the
assoclatlonalsonamedTomHochof
Lorain Clearvlew, Lee Owens of
Gallon and John Murphy of Nordonla as assistant coaches for the
McDaniels and the north team. To
work with Seaman and the south
players, tbe directors chose John
Sines at Chillicothe, VIncent Suriano
of Cadiz and Farrell Ackley of
Sununll Country Day In Cincinnati.
The teams wUI be chosen by the
coaches from a pool of players
nominated by the regional dlrec·
Iars. Each team will have 33
players.
The coaching staffs were chosen
based on their records and their
consistency In winning, said Joe
Demaree, the director of the game.
Sponsored by Dial, the game wUI
be played on July 19 at Paul Brown
Tiger Stadium In Mas sOlon.

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Kevin
Mack, Bob Golic and Curt is
Weathers wlll receive awards from
the Touchdown Club of Cleveland, It
was announced Wednesday.
Mack has earned offensive player
of the year honors, while Galle was
named on defense and Weathers on
special teams.

..---------:·• .

LEATHER
MEN'S JACKETS
"Memben Only"

·LEATHER BRIEF
CASES
LEATHER TRAVEL
CASES
{SHAVING BAGS)

LEATHER BELTS
LEATHER BILLFOLDS
OPEN EVENINGS

DAN'S

IN THE MIDDLEPORT
MASONIC BUILDING

Two beautiful ways to

greet the season.
Send the FTQ'!'!
Cand le Glow ··

Cavs announce deal

Bouq uet.
Orthe FrO

RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP!) -The
Cleveland Cavaliers waited until
just before game time Tuesday
before trading guard· forward to
Indiana for a fourth· round pick In
1987.
Andel'!Dn's spot on the Cavaliers'
roster was taken by forward-center
Lonnie Shelton, who has not. played
this season after undergoing knee
surgery Oct. I.
Anderson, a 1\-foot-7, 220- pound
product of Fresno State was
Cleveland's second-rowld pick In
1981. He had been told by the team
Morv:!ay of his Imminent departure.

Holiday Cheer ··

Bouquet
Call or visit

..

m today.

•

•

'

·.
,.'

,

Only $1.40
""'~:;::-,"··

Coupon 0 rgamzer

roll01g along undefeated after five
games under new coach PeteGillen.
GUJen, who took the coaching
reins 'from Bob Staak last summer.
guided the Musketeers to an 83-61
win over Eastern Michigan Tues·
day night at Ypsilanti, Mich.
Shooting 75 percent from the floor
In the firs! half, Xavier romped to a
42-26 halftime advantage 'and
coasted the rest of the way.
Senior toward Walt McBride
scored 22_points and ~ team·
mates shot In double ligures to pace
the Musketeers. Riehle Harris
added 16, Byronl.arkinl5andEddle
Johnston 13.
Smtt Lewlss Jed the scoring lor
96-62. .
Eastern Michigan, 1-3, with 22
points.

.

raising his average 57 points from
the previous season.
Vukovich was acquired from
Phlladelphla Dec. 9, 1982, In a5-for-1
that also brought shortstop Julio
Franco In exchange for outfielder
Von Hayes.
In 628 games over 5'h seasons,
Vukovich owns a career batting
average ol .268 with 27 homers and
roJR.Bl.
In other news, the Indians have
drafted third baseman- outfielder
Ed Williams, the Class-A Midwest
League's player ct the year, off the
roster of Cincinnati's Cedar Rapids
affiliate.
Williams, a 21-year-old native of
Shreveport, La., hit .~1 In 119
games, and scored 71 runs with 20
homers and 83 RBI.
WIUiams, drafted for $50,IDJ, has
been added to Cleveland's majorleague roster.
If he does not remain with the
Indians for at least OOdays, he can be
reclaimed by the Reds for $25,1XXl.
. WIU!ams originally was ae&lt;julred
from the New York Mets' organlza·
lion lor pitcher.Bruce Berenyl.

ANO'DIERGOOD NIGHT- Meigs' Rick Wise, (II) pul&gt;lln a layup
during third quarter action of Tuesday's &amp;1-62 TVC victory over Trimble.
Wise led Meigs scorers with 18 points.

.

At CJ~eland, Clinton Smith led
four Cle\l!'land State players In
double figures with 23 points in the
Vikings' 88-76win over Akron.
Ken McFadden added 16 points
for 5·1 CSU, Eric Mudd 13 and
Clinton Ransey 12.
The VIkings, who held a 45-33
h:illtlrne advantage, led by as many
as ro points, 74-54, with 6: 21left In the
game.
The 2·3 Z,tpswere paced by Marcel
, Boyce's 28 points, John Loyer's 12
and Doug Schutz and Mark McClendon's lOeach.
Elsewhere In Obiocoliege basketball action Tuesday night, Cedar·
ville defeated Wilmington, 86-76;
Malone downed Point Park (Pa,),
84-75; and Walsh blasted Franklin, .

'

said.

..Wherever."

Musketeers ~eep streak intact
By United Press lntemallonal

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.. "

27 of 60 for 45 per cent. The
difference came at the foul line
where Meigs made 17 or 23 and
Trimble eight of 13.
Meigs won a rebounding battle as
close as the game ltselt, 33-32.
Chancey added nine to POwell's 11
whlle Chris Karns and Davis led
Trimble with 10 each. Both teams
bad 111\lmovers.
In other TVC action Tuesday,
Warren Local defeated FederalHocking 65-52, Alexander nipped

Outfielder Vukovich
sent to Japanese team

....'

"At the End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

Meigs resen-es post another win

1~)-2. ~JI..JI.M

...COWBIN MANf'

ers could not pull away either,
leading once by nine points at 35-26
for the largest advantage.
Shawn Baker was also a main
catayUst In the Meigs win as the
senior forward popped In a career·
high 16 points.
Now5-0overalland4.01ntheTVC,
M ~igs prepares for a ke~ match-up
with co-leader Belpre this Fri:lay at
Meigs.
·
Trimble's Morrison led the Tomcats with 25 points, mostly on
jumpers around the perimeter
whlleteammateChuckDavlsadded
19. Melgs'MikeChanceywasheldto
only one field goal and six points b)i a
Tomcat defense thatsurrourv:!ed the
blgMarauderlorwardeverytlmehe
eyed the hoop.
'We dld a poor. job of team
rebounding In the first half. Powell
showed he can play and he and
Baker took up the slack left by
Trimble's sloughing off on Chancey.
Thlswas agamewehadtowin,'sald
Meigs coach Greg Drummer, who
now has a career mark at Meigs at
35-34, the first time he has bettered
the .500 mark since taking over the
slumping program four ye~s ago.
Meigs made 23 of 49for47per cent
from !.he field while Trimble canned

• J

Ji 19 19 27- M
Non h Galllu
10 1~ 17 J.l-lf)
SOlJ111DCN - Todd Adam." tHJ. J6, Jay ~Uc k
S-J· l ~. R ictlard CUbrldP 2-0..t, Kr n n~• Thr~y 4...lll ,Ulvld A m iJU~ · :hl9 };(&gt;!WI GnK'Sf"'' HJ.~ K ('J k_&gt;)•
(ii'Ul'S('r 2-J. 7.Mall Ha rti.&lt;l as. Todd Klrre; 1-{}2.Erk'
MWi ron l .U.2 .•Jamk' Hl'n.\k't !NWI.and Srolt Wick lint'

CALL NOW AND SAY-

JACKSONVILLE - Rick Wise
put in two free throws with five
seconds left to Insure a Meigs 63-62
win over Trimble here Tuesday,
keeping the Marauders unbeaten
skein alive at five games,
.
Free throws were Meigs' top ally
asLeePowellandWiseteamedupto
put In nlneo!IOduringthe!lnalthree
minutes as the Marauders maintained a fourth period lead despite ·
not scoring a field goal In the game's
last four mlnu tes.
Wise, who led Meigs with 18
points, made four of four and
Powell, who had hls best game ever
with 16 points and a game-11Jgh 11
rebounds, made ·five of six during
the waning seconds, all of them
crucial.
Wise's final two free tosses
enabled Meigs to take a 6J.60 lead.
Trimble, out of tlmeouts, was not
pressured as Tee Morrison drove
the length of the court to lay In the
game's final two points as the clock
ran out.
Trimble, suffering their flrstTVC
loss against three wins, goes to 3-2
overall. The Tomcats gained the
leadonlyonceduringthegame, that
a momentary 22-20 margin early In
the second quarter. But the Maraud·

Eagles of Coach Dennis Eichinger 1------~---l----------- ,Z;
picked ·up the tempo of the game,
• . .
,
.
,
blltzlngtoa31·16halftimelead.
~
".
Eastern had a strong secor&gt;:! half,

Seofto By Q\aarter11:
Sou lher n

KNTipr~'l- 12$1\anr

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER .

...,...,_

Sentinei - Page~ 5

Marauders remain unbeaten with 63-62 win at Trimble

said Bedrosian wlll return to the
bullpen after 37 starts In 1985. He
began hls major-league career as a
reliever.
Until !urther notice, the swift
Thompson owns an ootfleld job and ·•
Is expected to be the club's leadoff
hltter.
Before the trading flurry , Ueberroth continued Ills crusade against
Illegal drug use In baseba ll In his · ··
"state-d-the- game" speech. He ··
said his sport has "turned the
corner" on the problem.
"We can lick It and make baseball
a drug-free sport," he said.
. ..
. The major-league draft also took
place, with thlrd baseman Eddie . ··
WUUams selected by Cleveland as · "
the No. 1 pick. Eight players were
chosen, the most rotable being Clint
Hurdle by the Cardinals. He was
. obtained for $50,1XXl from the Mets'
organization.

Eastern rips Bobcats, 75-38

The Daily

Pomeroy- JYiiddleport, Ohio

.

..

·'

.

�Wednesday. December 11. 1985

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel
Jay Long, Belpre, Bill MarshaU,
Washington Court Hotuse, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Dietz, Columbus, and Mr.
and Mrs. Warren Pickens.
· Mr.and Mrs. DavldWebervislted
wlth her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Vaughn Taylor atDaytondur1ngthe
Thanksgiving hoUday.
, Visiting with Mrs. Gladys WIIUMr. and Mrs. Darrel Chevalier
: ams and Mr. and Mrs. Lyle and family o! Fredertcktown; were
: Bal!)erson on Thanksgiving were recent guests of his mother, Mrs.
, Ms. Kathryn Dietz and Mr.and Mrs. Edward Chevalier.

Reedsville
_personal notes

Pvt. WUUam T. Norton, son of
Harold R. Norton of 34836 State
Route 7, and grandson of DeUa
Norton of 104 Ebenezer St., both of

Norton
completes
OSUT training

Pomeroy, has completed ooe sla·
lion unit training (OSl!I') at the
U.S. Army Infantry School, Fort
Benning, Ga.
osur is a 12-week period which
combines basic combat tratnlng
and advanced Individual training.
The training Included weapons

J

qualifications, squad tactics, patrolling, landmlne warfare, field
communications and combat operations. Completion of this rourse
qualifies the soldier as a Ughtweapons Infantryman and as an
Indirect-lire crewman.
Soldiers were taught to perform
any r1 the duties In a rille or mortar
squad.
He is a 1982 graduate of Eastern
High School, Reedsvtlle.

'

• Wednesday, December 11. 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport.

Slinderella meets

Your SocSec:

Jackie Fields and Connie Thompson lost the most weight, and
Barbara Varian and Beth Weaver
were runners-up at the recent
meeting of the Sllnderella classes
held at Mason. At the F1ve Points
class Wednesday night, Helen
Wilson was recognized for having
reached her goal weight and was
accepted Into the sllrn-'n-tr1m
maintenance program. Jo Ann
Newsome is lecturer.

COPYRIGHT 1985 . THE KROGER CO . ITEMS
AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. OEC . 8,
THROUGH SATURDAY . DEC . 14. 1985. IN
CPtll iPOUS &amp; POMEROY STORES

WE RESERVE THE RIGH T TO LIMIT OUAN·
TITlES. NONE SOLO TO DEALERS .

lDVUI11SED 111M POliCY

tlc t1 o1 th eM ldll8f1ise&lt;l•tems 11 r!Kluired to ~ reldh I Y~~~~
tor Nit'" 111ch KroQor Store. e~cept 11 !peciloc~lly ll!l t ed •n this
ad II we do run out of'" td w8f1i11d otam. we w~l a"'' you your
choice ot a eomptrebltt otem, wntr1 1vailllblfl. reflecting the Mmt
uv1ng1 or 1 rliflchfiCt! which Ml .entit~ ~ou to purci'IHe Ttl•
ad11t1rlis$d item af•tfle act.&lt;ert•sed prl{:.e w•thm 30 days. Only ont
vendor coupon w~l be accepted ptr •tem purcllaNd .

ORIGAMI - Taka8hJ and Hwnl Taguchl of Athens where Takasld ~
a student at Ohio University, are In Meigs County this week
demonstratln,g the traditional Japanese an of paper folding- origami
- to elernenlary students of Melanie Murphy, Meigs I.ooal art
· . lnstnldor; Salisbury third graders madeswans from paper. Above,
Hwnl delllOII!IIrated lor the ciU., and below, RoUJy Jones struggles to
to It lUill right.

DOUBLE manufacturer's
\/\fo1·n

The Daily Sentinai-Page-7 :

than retirement

BY LOU HORVA'rll
Fleld Rep-tatlve
As I've said In most of these
articles, Social Security Is much
mo~ than just a retirement
system. Very lnnportantly, It Is also
central to estate planning. In this
column, we'll take a look at
survivors' benefits and what
happens when a benetlclacy dies.
Let's deal wlth the sreond of those
two issues first. EllglbUity tor
Social Security benefits is based on
meeting the payment requirements
for an entire calendar month. If all
conditions are met throu(lllout, then ·
that month's benefit check an1ves
on the third day of the following
month. The check mailed oo Jan. 3
represents December's benefltettglbillty, for example.
When a beneficiary dies during
the month, the check received
following the month of death must
be returned. I know this Is an area
of misunderstanding for a substantial number of toikS. We Invariably
get a few calls m:mthly asking IJ&gt;w
much of the deceased beneficiary's
check should be returned. Because
there Is no pro-rating of a monthly

$10.00 Purchase--See Store.For Details

the entire check
The quall!ylng
, h&gt;wever. could

to benefits wlth the
so benefits would, In
for that rmnth.
What halj!Jens If a person dies
aft~ the
ts received, but
before he OI\ she cashes It? In that
case, ihe chl!ck Is considered a due
payment wljlch wUI be reissued to a
qualifying~~_rvtvor or the estate
once the ongmal check Is returned.
Another co~
·
n concern Is the
death paym nt palo as a lump sum.
This ts the
that, prior to 1981,
was issued, to whomever was
responsible ~r the Income earner's
burial expepses. Stnre mld-1981,
thou(Ill, only :the surviving spouse or
children who are eligible t&gt;r
benefits ntelve the payment
''

Winner named
I

Normani, Pomeroy, was the
e afghan In a fund·
raising pro . ttom recently held by
theAuxll!aryo!VeteransMemorlal
Hospital. I

winner of

Training
completed

14-17-LB. AVG.

CI.EAII UP WITH

IAlso, payment Is Urnlted to those
who have enough oovered earnings
under Social Security.)
To become entitled to survivor
benefits, a child must be either a
natural, adopted, or stepchUd of the
Income earner and under age 18.
Disabled children of any age are
eligible If the disability began prior
to age 22.
Surviving· spouses can receive
benefits If they have a chUd In care
under 16 or If they are age 00.
Widows and widowers who are
disabled can receive benefits as
early as age 00. Divorced widows
aild widowers are eligible II the
marriage to the Income earner
lasted ten years.
If you think you or someone you
know may meet the requirements
for a survivor's benefit, what do you
do? Well, as they say at the Senbr
Center on Mulberry Heights, don't
just ask a neighbor. Call your Social
Secortty office In Athens at ~2-tiGZl
and get the facts. ·
If you have a question you'd !Ike
answered In this column, just send
It to the Sentinel and we'll do our
best.

CLASSRD APS

f'?

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R BUSINESS SERVICES

Second Lt. Gerl R. Becker,
daughter of Roy and Helen Rue of
214 E. Laurel Ave., Plentywood,
Mont., ·has completed the U.S. Air
Force mWtary lnOOctrlnatlon tor
medical service officers at Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas.
Her husband, Air Foroe Capt.
Randy B. Becker, Is the son r1 Don
c. Becker of Middleport.

COUPONS

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.,

�Page-8-'-The Daily Sentinel

~
'
~YltACOS,t
. .

,,

..
_lr.jll

~m:~o~n:t fr:n: ~me
were made when the M v ge
lddleport
Garden Club met
homeotMrs John~=tly at the
The proj~t to
r..
1
dents to decorate ~~~~rrs~~
sponsored by the Mlddl rt
Garden~ Club and the Ml epo
Amatuer Gardene
ddleport
Middleport Club ~- :~yea!r ~
· .
or ~"'

l\'ltACU~
'\~

1

''.I

~ , '

·~ 't

~~~:~~~~lnseveralcategories
As In
lou.
lion Is
~:ear~~~
judgeswlllbeselec/:'byrfte. HD~
and then wiD be drl
~cy
Mr J
:
arou town
by
~ :mes
old and Judy
~ju""L:; :e homesnced
. Date d.
"6"'6
annou
later.

R. C. Cola
16 oz.
BTLS.

·-.,· i

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Valerie ConnoDy, Angie Swiger, Klrnberly Jenkin!,
Bethany Bass; third row, Jennifer Cross, Serena
Davt., Angle MDL&gt;!, Becky Null. Advisor Is Lura
Swiger.

69

$1gg

.·

Golden Rule
class meets
Members of the Golden Rule
Class of the Middleport First Baptist
Church met recently at the Pomeroy Health Care Center to visit with
theresldentstherebeforegolngonto
the home of Jhn and Glenna Reibel
for a desert smorgasbord.
Plans were made to decorate the
lnterk&gt;r of the church for Christmas.
Cards were sign€4 for those on the
church prayer· list. Next meeting
will be on Dec. :aJ at 5:30p.m. at the
home of the Rev. and Mrs. Earl
Eden for a Christmas party and
white elephant exchange. Gtrts will
be purchased for the residents of the
Meigs County Inftnnary.
Attending were the Rev. and Mrs.
Eden, Jean Thomas, Manning and
June l&lt;loes, Dale and Marjorie
Walburn, Pat Burton; Sue and
Kenneth Imbol!en, the Relbels, and
daughter, Pam.

•DRIP•REGULAR•ELECTRIC PERK

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Several Times
Daily

lB•

WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Village
CouncU will meet ln special session
at 7 p.m. Wednesday at tile Civic
Center. Anyone Interested In the
town's finances is welcome to
a«end.

Duncan Hines
Cake Mixes

DANVlLLE - Revival Danvllle
Holiness Chu rc h, continuing
through Dec. 15. Evangelist Rev.
Earl Starnes, services 7 p.m.
nlghtly.

'

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Amateur Gardeners will meet
Wednesday at the LaSalle Restau·
rant for a dinner at 6:30p.m. There
will be a gill exchange. Janet
Koblentz wil have the program.

---.

-

.

,.....

HOLlY FARMS GRADE A

THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club will meet ThursdflY at
6:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. Okey
Connolly for a potluck Christmas
dinner.

SPLIT

........ Fryer Breasts

I •" •

' "
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29

POMEROY -The annual Christmas dinner of the Auxlllary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital w lll he
held Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the
hospital cafeteria . Auxiliary
members may Invite their husbands
to the dinner.

LB.

.''\

FOODLAND GRADE A.

Large ·
Eggs

-

~~~ SMORGASBORD

I

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...I

..

c

OFF

I
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I

POMEROY - Rock Springs
Grange holiday potluck dinner will
be held at 6: 30 Thursday at the hall .
The turkey will be furnished and
mel)'lbers are to take covered
dishes. Ca nned food for a Chlstrnas
project will also be collected and
there will be a while elephant gift
rexchange.

•

SHADE. RIVER - M!&gt;etlng of
Shade River Masonic LOOge, 7:00
p.m. Thursday at temple; open
Installation of officers to be held; All
master masons and their guests
Invited.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta

'

Beta Chapter, Bets Sigma Phi
Sorority meeting, 7: 30 p.m. Thursday at the Riverboat Room of
Diamond Savings and Loan.

DODGE PASS. VAN
. ••••••••••• S399f.
DODGE DSO PICKUP••••••••• S3495 :
MUSTANG ••••••••••••••••••••••••• S329 5 .:
DODG£ OMNI ••••••••••••••••••• S349 5:
PONTIAC J6000 ............... S4295
CADLLAC ELDORAD0•••••• $13,599.
CHRYS. LeBARON GTS ••• S12,295 ·

TUPPERS PI..AINS - All war
veterans of Orange and Olive
Townships are to hold a special
meeting at 7:30p.m. Thursday at
the Tuppers Plains Flre House;
refreslunents will be served.
FRIDAY
ROYAL OAK- Belles and Beaus
Square Dance Club wlll sponsor an
open house on Friday at the Royal
Oak Park Recreation BuDding
north of Pomeroy, 8to 11 p.m. Caller
for the evening wll be Sonny Bess of
Huntington, W. Va. All western
square dancers are invited to
attend.

SATURDAY
The annual Christmas dinner
for present and retired employees of the Foote Mineral Co.,
Local Union 5171 USWA and their
families will be held at the Union
Hall in Hartford, W. Va., Saturday, Dec. 14. The dinner will be
served from 1l a.m. to 8 p.m.
with no delveries. There will be
door prizes a nd treats for the
children.

I

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J

BAM PC

POITAIU
COLOI TV'S.

M Molt

Pooular~

IN THE MIDDLEPORT
MASONIC BUILDING

Dodge Truchs

399 So. 3rd.

992-6421

KEEPJACKFROSTFROM
NIPPING AT HIS TOES

HARTLEY
SHOES

WITH AM/FM RADIO

$26600

MIDDlEPORT

.

Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge

~

13" DIAG. COLOR

ONLY$22200
INGELS FURNII'URE &amp; JEWELRY
NOW

JC'I!f1111Jllffi

GREAT FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS

19'~.

-

f

COOPER

This holiday. give al l the w~rmth of th e season with a pair
of Timberland boots. i hey're made of waterproof leather
filled on both sides and the innersole with layers of insulation
that'll keep his feet warm and comfortable to temperatures
well below zero. So why give one great gift wh en you can
give two? A pair of Timberland waterproof boots.

The Bright One ':.·~\f-rom

Terms

DAN s

j CHRYSLE~

~~~~~~~~;;~!LJ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~§

SPECIAL CHRISTMAS OFFER!

Credit

Put On While
You Wait

BIDWELL - Gallla County
Freewill Baptist Cooference convenes at Poplar Ridge Freewlll
Baptist Church, 7 p.m. Frlday;
public Invited.
~

INGELS FURNITURE
Christmas
Delivery

SCHOOL DECALS

Department will sponsor a Christmas dance at the Symcuse Grade
School Friday from 8 to 11 p.m.
Admission; $2 person with proceeds
to go towards purchasing of resuce
air bags for the department.

POMEROY -Pomeroy Chapter
80, RAM , and Bosworth Councll46,
SYRACUSE - Volunteer Fire'
Royal and Select Masters. will meet
at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;~
Masonic Temple.
1

Ill

69

SWEAT .SHIRTS
and PANTS

'79
'80
'80
'82
'82
'83
'86

YOUTH &amp; ADULT SIZES

CAKE MIX

Steak

SWEATS

·

Ground Fresh

DELUXE

.;:•~irloin

Lana Proffltt.

Community calendar/ area happenings

21 VARIETIES

: ; TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE
~~
BONElESS TOP

ll:rWy Rizer, Tunl SSellers; lhlrd row, J~~~~
lla&amp;!lelcl, Heather Proffllt, Tonya Cremeans. A
was Jessica Covert. Advisors are Marllyn Cooper and

PORTLAND CHEERlEADERS- Making up the
llfth grade cheerleadlng squad al Portland Elementary are, first row, from left, BonnleLaw80n, Frannie
Hewitt; second row, (]Juioltle Cooper, Barbie Roush,

Ground Chuck

PORK SHOULDER
STEAKS

74 DODGE DART ........... $19995
'76 VOLARE WGN •••••••••• $49995
'76 FIAT WAGON ........... $49995
'77 DODGE PASS. VAN ••• S18999S
I

1-LB.
PKG.

LB.

ery. The mantel display was of red
tapers in brass holders, pine
branches, a hugh red satin bow, all
lightedwlthcoloredllghts. Acluster
of poinsettias, and a large basket
withredandgreenribbonfllledwith
pine cones completed the setting.
The refreshment table was covered In red and had acenterpleceof
a silver candelabra with red tapers,
surrounded with ' a wreath of
greenery and fruit. Mrs. Musser
presided atthe punchbowlandMrs'.
Hill atthe silver coffee servlce. ~
president gave favors of small
cornhusk wreathes trimmed with
tinsel, colored beads and bells'
Hostesses were Mrs. Musser and
Mrs. Arthur Skinner assisted by
Mrs. Allee Nease.
'.

~

SYRACUSE RAIDERS - Making up the fifth
grade cheerleadlng squad al Syracuse Elementary
are, first row, from left, Tamara Hayman, Justin
Connotzy, lliiiSrot, and Raberta Caldwell; second row,

ECKRICH.
ALL MEAT

Great Grocerv

Mrs. Hill opened the meeting with
a Christmas poem, and then
members reponded to roll call by
giving memories of Christmases
past-There were comments on the
recent holiday flower show of the
county association by several o1 the
members who attended.
Mrs. David Bowen had charge of
the Christmas program which
Included several contests, Gift
wrapPings were judged by Mrs.
Musser with Nellie Zirkle being
awarded a prtze.Afterthemembers
exchanged gifts, they toured the
Musser home which was decorated
In keeping with the season.
Featured In the living room were
large red candles in silver holders
combined with Christmas green-

''\'RJ\CVSf

~Rebate
Franks
Kielbasa

•HOT •SMOKED SAUSAGE

negls:-

r!:;:;"lred

DIET RITE, RC 100, DECAF.

ECKRICH

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Garden: Club conducts meeting :

NOW AVAILABLE
HOLIDAY
FRUIT BASKETS

•We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities
·
•Prices Effactiva Wednesday, Dec. 1 thN Saturday;
December 14, 1985•USDA Food Stamps Accepted ·
•Not Responsible For Typographical Errors.

. '

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

STOP IN AND SEE MAn
AND SAY HELLO

992-2635

Il&lt;'fli:I!•B•IIIi..i•r-!IMI•flllil!lll••~••••"•'•iiri;.!.i.iil!ll; I
\

.

'·•

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�·l•c··~··\•

---

By JIM FISHER

United l'relii!ID*emational
A.mighty storm front emptied a
mixed bag or wintry weather across
the nation's midsection today,
~mplng snow on the Plains,
dropping tornadoes on Texas, and
spreading deadly ice on highways
from Texas to the Great Lakes.
A storm that dropped hall on
Southern California Tuesday also.
brougilt. rare snow flurries to the
northern suburbs or Los Angeles. A
winter storm warning was posted
today for heavy snow In the Antelope
Valley or Southern California.
Slret and freezing rain sllckened
roads !rom Texas to Illinois. Since
Saturday, the massive storm system has been blamed lor at least 19
deaths, Including 12 in traffic
accidents on icy Kansas roads
Tuesday.
Snow fell today from Montana to
Iowa, with up to 6 inches expe&lt;:ted.
Bitter cold mixed wlthraln tocreate
icy problemsasfarsouthasAbllene,
Texas, where the Ice began forming
on bridges just after sundown.
The snow stopped In Wyoming,
Colorado and Utah. but winds that
gusted to 74 mph pushed wind c.hills
35 degrees below zero and whipped
up to 2fl'('t of snow on the ground Into
drifts 5 feet high.
1n Kansas, seven people died In
Parsons when their car spun out of

.."·
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••
••

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• CLEARS SNOW - A woti&lt;er begins the dlilly task
~ deanlg lleVerallnches of overnight SIOwfaD from
Gl'lllll Avenue Church In Denver Tu~ night

,iJ!e

after a major winter stonn stalled over the Colorado
front range dropping smw for the second straight
day. UP!.

Uarold Huuon
Harold Hutton, 77, a Meigs County
native, died early Tuesday morning
at . the Monterey Nursing Inn In
Grove City.
': 13om March 13, 190lnear Dexter,
ulatton was a son of Mr. and Mrs.
S,muel Hutton, both deceased.
Mr. Hutton was a retired malntalnance worker and a U.S. Army
~anofWorldWarll.

' 'Survivors Include his wife, Helen

~Hutton,whomhemarrledln1948;
one son. Larry Hutton of Columbus;
8j)d one sister, Nellie Root rl. Meigs

County.
Services will be 1 p.m. Friday at
t~ Hunter Funeral Home with Rev.
Uoyd Grimm otflctatlng. Burial will
ii.:m Roblmnn Cemetery. Friends
may call at lhefuneralhomefrom7
tji~p.m. Thursday.

Jowhunters
to meet
..•

.,.,,
"Rutland Bowhunters wUI ml'('t
siturday, 8 p.m., at the clubhouse.
~~ ltlk!ers will be elected.

\, 'I

Emergency squads
q1,18Wer Jive calls

· Jideigs County Emergency Medlci.ai Service reports five calls
~ay; Syracuse at 1:42 a.m.
~rted Judy Laudermllt from
'\II.auto accident at the intersection
ofl•Pine Grove and Salser Rds. to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Mldat 11:26 a.m. took Delcle
li'ath fr&lt;m 263SouthFifthSt. to Dr.
J~ Conde's office; Middleport
~t:;ll: 53 a.m. to 628 Oliver St. for
PHrl Hdfman to Veterans Memorlfi'Hospltal: Pomeroy at 11:54 a.m.
19:,33198 Children's Home Rd. lor
R.iphSwanJr. who was treated but
nOt· transported; Rutland at 2:13
p.m. to Depot St. for Melissa
Q!nnan to Veterans Memorial
HOspital.

diiiPort

..

'

All Middleport funds totaled
lola Mae Conner
$Jl1,900.7U as of November ::.1,
Clerk- Treasurer Jon Buck
lola Mae Conner, 62, New Haven, VUiage
reports.
died Tuesday at Pleasant Valley
Receipts, expenditures durlngthe
Hospital.
month and the end of the month
She was born Oct. 20, 19ZI in New
Haven to the late Harry and Hllda total. respectively, Include:
Gen e ral lund --$12,869 .59 ,
Anderson Warth.
$15,351.36,
$22,667.45; street malnteShe worked on the production line
nance,
$3,436,83,
$5,883.67, $16,lm.21
at Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical
deficit; HUD, no receipts, no
Corp.
disbursements,
$267.66 deficit; ledSurviving are three sons, Lloyd era! revenue sharilig,
no receipts,
W. Conner Jr. of Letart, 'f.lmothy R.
Conner of JacksonvUie, Fla., and S3.:m, $944.02; street lighting, no,
receipts, $1,556.42, $3,561.74; street
Laramie P. Roush of New Haven;
levy, noreceipts,nodlsbursements,
lour grandchildren.
Funeral services will be Friday at SZI,402.JS; lire equipment, $75,$378,
1 p.m. at the First Church of God in $7,380.44 deficit; fire truck, no
receipts, no disbursements,
New Haven with the Rev. Dave $1,172.&amp;1; public transportation,
Fields Jr. officiating. Burtal wUI
$5 374 .,., $5 149 15 $8 607 ro deficit
follow In Graham Cemetery.
• ·"· ' · ' ' .
'
Friends may call at the Foglesong
oo disbursements,
$126,717.29;
fire
sewer escrow,
no receipts,
Funeral Home from 6-9 p.m. on sanitary
house Improvement fund, $.ll.33,
Thursday.
$1,628.79, $24,693.49; water tank, no
The body wUI lie In state one hour
receipts, no disbursements,
prior to services at lhe church.
$140,977.58; water, $9,125.73,
$8,361.63, $28,012.35; sanitary sewer.
$7006.98, $10,784.84, $34,047.28;
sWimming pool, $500, $17.25,
$4,726.24
deficit ; cemetery,
Past grand master
$1,006.87, $2,275.04, $4,137.61 deficit;
Saturday guest speaker water meter trusts, $:1&gt;5, $001.35,
$ll,104.60; I. cont. , $2,818.:Mi,
Jerry Rasor, past grand master of $3,346.57, $1.831.60 deficit; economic
Masons In Ohio, will he guest devel., no receipts, $183.37,$8,353.74.
speaker at the Middleport Masonic Receipls for the month totaled
Temple, 7 p.m Saturday.
$42,609.36 while disbursements
Rasor is now promotion director amounted to $58,888.22.
of the Ohio Masonic Home, Springfield, and wUI be accompanied to AtTests announced
Middleport by some of the residents
of the home · who will provide
Thirty-five arrests were made by
entertainment for the evening. the Middleport Police Department
Rasor is a well-known speaker durtng November, Chief of Police
througout the United States, having Sid Little reports.
been on television and radio for
The department Investigated six
several years.
accidents and collected $990. 7U from
The meeting Is open'to ail Masons, the parking meters with 528 parking
Eastern Stars, and invited guesls in meter tickets being issued. Mer·
the 12th Masonic District, com- chant police collections totaled $52.
prtsedor Meigs, Gallla, Jackson and All motor vehicles were driven 4,509
Lawrence Counties,
mUes durtng the month.

$1999

125.99 NOW

BOYS'

BLACK LEE JEANS
REG.

118.99 NOW

-:-=-..=--..,._;.;~...;....-:::

$1299
'

STRAIGHT LEVI'S

I,

1
'

. LADIES lEVI

DENIM JACKEtS

132,99 NOW $2 799

DUCK

CARHARn COATS
129.99 NOW

$2499

'

BLACK LEE JEANS
$ 99

$1599

122.99 NOW

1104.99
SHEBOYGAN !Style No. 24001'

STRETCH LEE JEANS

INSULTED BOOTS

NOW

$1 699 Reg.II09.99NOW $8999

$

LADIES' QUILTED NYLON

9
WINTER JACKETS •••••!!!·.!~.~:.!!............!9.! 19 5

DAN
·-

I

by the M!ddieport Fire Department
during November, Fire Chief J~ff
Darst reports. . The department
answeredfourfirecaUsandmade31
emergency runs. AU vehicles were
driven a total of 904.7 miles during
lhemonth.
'

THE QUAUTY
PIIIT SIIOP

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

board.
At least 10 tornadoes hit central
Texas Tuesday, including one that
struck the. Rabbit Hili School in
GEorgtotown. Two children suffered
minor cuts rrom flying glass.

VINYl &amp; AlUMINUM
Comploto Gutter WOrk
Complete Romodotlng
Roofing of oil Typos

F11 All flir ,,lllltf Nub

. 20 y•ro
"Free Eotlmotet"
CAU COllfCT:

The Texas twisters destroyed
several houses In Brushy Creek,
Texas, and strong wilids picked up .
cars, crushed roofs and downed
power lines in the area.
Thunde~torms that dumped up :
to 31nches of rain on parts of Texas, :
Oklahoma, Louisiana and Arkansas
prompted a flash fiood watches.
In Utah, three employees and a :
customer or the Fabric Shop In Salt :
Lake City·ran from the buDding as ~
ceiling toes !ell just before the •
weight of 5!ret ofdrtned snowcaved .
In the TOQf Tuesday. One woman :
suffered slight iii juries.
•
"We heard a rumble and looked :
up, and the whole roof started I
coming in, likeanmrtlljuake," said 1
employee Pat Gardner.
The National Weather ServicE( ;
said wind of up to 74 mph were •
recorded north or Salt Lake City in ,
Centerville.
•

anti Graduation

Stationlry, ..,.ttk
SigM, luiiiMr Stamps.
lusfntss Forms,

. Ph, 16141 143-5425

992-3

11·12-2 mo.

THE
KOUNTRY
IClUI

Am • CRAns • Gf1'S

Golf
' Equipment

••r

Now Grips
I I $2.50 1a.
.,_ Gtll ....... $6.00 0..
•New S. Prior Owned Clubs
•CultOm Clubs
Youth Club•
•Sho• •Trophies

WOODWORK SHOP
320 -Cond., STrftt
,,..troy, Ohio
CHIISTMAS HOURS
Mon.·Tutt.-WIOI.- Fri. I lat.
10:00 l.M. ·~t 3:00P.M.
Clolltl Sun.•&amp;n..n.

50% OFF

•Repelr

On Most Items
Through Christmas
12-11·1 mo.

JOHN TIAFOID
Chooltr, Ohio

12-11-1 mo.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

•'

992-3410

Bitter cold had residents shiver- •
ing in Wyoming and Colorado. The •
winds cut visibility and hampered
attempts to keep highways In
southwest Wyoming open.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

PHONE 992-2156

• """ Your .....,_ .
AMi•wt~ty or S,•tal

Real Estate General

Occasiort ., Vicl .....wo
lapo Arly Spociol Occasion.

CHAlliS lAilEY
2

In Memoriam

- - - - -·
64 Miac. Merchandl•;

IN MEMORY
The flowers were
beautiful,
And the cards were
sincere.
Thank you for your
kindness
D · th 1
f
urmg
e OS$ 0
one so dear.
T
II f
0 a 0 . you too
numerous lo mention, we extend our
sincere thanks.

Help wanted

HELP WANTED

BRAZIER
OF MIDDLEPORT

AN EQUAl OPPORTUNilY EMPLOYER WilL 8£ AC·
mnNGAPPlKAnONSFOR SMiliNG FACE $.FOR
FilL AND PART-nME POSJnONS.

The Family of
June E• Hunnell

Applications may be picked up at 700 N. Sec811d Ave., Middleport, on Dec. 13 &amp; 14 from 9

BATTERIES.

•'

3 YEAR WARRANTY

$3995
ALL SIZES IN STOCK

,.

·

OLDER HOUSE with 3 bed·
:rooms on corner lot in Syr•cuse.

''

\:•,att'on
~

OPEN 7 DAYS 11 WEEK
6 A.M. TO 11 P.M.
PHONE 614-992·9932

Chrlet11111 Speelll

BANK

•rNo Suntlny
949-2860
Calls

949·2210

992-2635

8·8-tfc

CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp; PINE CONES
FOR WREATHS
AlSO
PIIE-CUl TREES
AVAILABLE

RENT A' CAR
CALL

HAILEY HANING

.
R~TAL

EASTERN - 9 acres. 3BRs,
furnace, woodburner, full
basement, bldgs. &amp; tg. garden . Asking $30,000.
IIIODLEPORT - Next to
busines~ section. 3 SRs, 2
story frame, F.A. lumace,
woodburner &amp; 2 baths,
BAUIIS SUB. DIV. - 3 yr.
old bi-level, 4 BRs, lg. family
rm., carpeting, tow heat bitt,
insulated home.
$10,00.00 - 2 BR mobile
home w~h 2 rm. lactory
built add~ion . Family rm.
with ~iding glass dr. &amp; ll
acre.
BRADBURY - 7 rm. re·
. mvated home. 4 BRs, na\J ral gas furnace, fireplace
with unit, cook &amp; bake un~ts,
garage &amp; ltatlot.
SYRACUSE - Full baseJnent, 2 BRs, formal diing, all
new kitchen wrth stove &amp;relrigertor, lg. lot &amp; garageshop.
·POMEROY - 2 BR frame
wrth lull basment &amp; lg. tot.
ll7,500.
MIDDLEPORT - Walk to
the stores. 3BRs, dinmg, na·
'tur1l ps furnace . 2 arr jilr·
:age &amp; lot. Asking $25.000.

$39900

,.

Houstng
Hc&lt;~dqu&lt;Jrtl•rs

,4,,,,~

....
Cllltnctifttl S.nice

ST. RT. 143 - Anewer 3
bedroom ranch home, 2

JEFF CIIICll, Sll.

baths, equipped (;!chen, on
approx. 2.35 acres: rndudes
ch1cken house, st01age build·
ing, garden space. Priced reduced.

PORTlAND- 2 bedroom A·
frame on approx. 5 acres,
stone lireplace. W~h $8,400
down payment assume bal·
ance of $23,500 at 8.75%
for 23 year term. Payment of
$236.00 per month, includes taxes and insurance.
Total $31,900.00.

Henry E. Ctelmd, Jr.
992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turnlf 992-5692
Jo Hill 985-4466

.A
REALTY
Broker

CONDOR ST. - Four room house, used as ollice rental. Askipg $7,500.00.
COUNTRY LIVING - Two mil~s from Rutland. Three bed room all electric home, full basemen! and one car garaee.
Asking $39,900.00.
Velma Nicinsty, Associate
Phone; 742-3092

,, ' '

,,

•Colll,ltlll Remodelinc
deo111 Additions
•RoofitW
•SiditW

•Gara,es &amp; Pole
Buildtnas

MAICUM
COIITIACnNG

Roger Hysell
Garage

POMEROY - Brick. lwo bedroom home, large livina room
wlfireplace,_dininBroom , full basement, one car garage and
hrport. Askrng $4;!,500.00.
·

i
•

11-12-1 mo.

POMEROY - 3 bedroom
home on good street, basement, garage, garden space.
Priced Reduced.

~ HOBSTETTER

S)9900

PH. 949·2649

Lona Bottom. Ohio

,,

Ofi.Y

l1111 iottem, OhiD

LONG BOnOII - Athree
bed room home with unfinished family room. Forced
air heat, T.P.C. water w1lh
approx. B\1 acres ol wooded
land. Also garage plus storage. Asking $15,500.00.

Real E1t1te Gener'll

MODEL ML-40

(free Estimates)

Ph. 915-·141

Frea E1tim1tes
10-lltln

Rt. 124,Porneroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

REPAIR

DOZER, BACKHOE,
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER,
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES.
REClAMATION, PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

KEN'.$
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All Mt..•

•W•ahera •Di1hw..her1
•Rangaa

•Rofrlgerotore

•Dryen •FrHZtrl

PARTS •nd SERVICE
l·S·Ik

Cleaner. one half milo up
Georges Crook Rd . Call
614-448-0294.

House. Friday a. Saturday
December 13 &amp; 14 ., 10am
to 9 p.m. Gtorto Oiler, SR.
325. Langsville. Oh.
Lonely, need a date? Meet
rhat special someone today!

Call Dotetlme tott-froo 1800-972-7676 anytime day
or night.

person! Call or write ior
application . Personal Touch

Free to good home 2 small

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

breed puppies 6 mo. Call
614-388-966t .

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Pit Bull dog female. free to
good home. Raised with
children, good watch dog .

Colt 614-266-6074.

6 wookt old, 2 female. •matt
Geiman Shepherd . Call

614-69 2-6329 "'814-44687B8.

PICK UP WEEKLY
Re..onlbll RatM- Ritilble
11-!l·l ....

2 kittens titter trained. Colt
614-446-1844.
Free Chrlstma• tdttens . Cell

614-268-1679.

GUN SHOOT
RACINE .
FIRE DEPT.
SAT. NIGHT

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tank's.

6:30 P.M.

PAT HILL FORD

EVERY

Free puppiet multiple co·

tored variety. Call 614-446·
8022.
.
3 mo. old malo puppy part,
Elk Hound , port Shepherd.
Atoo 3 yr. old mote Boatgo.
Colt 304-675-6466.
Part Collie male dog . Prefer

fiiu£ STREAK CAB CO~l
St.,

Pomeroy,

11

6

Lost and Found

Help Wanted

1 ~-------

condition. With auppUea.

Witt train $3,400. Call 804788-6647.

Preparation, Mining and In·
duatrial Sales Engineer. Ex·
cellent opportunity for a
profe11lonal. who can work
without direct supervialon

setting engineered producll

to the mining industry In
southern West Virginia and
••-'ern Ohio .
We offer:
Protected Territory

No limit on income· No
penatly for succeaa
Established customer base

22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS-Roflnonco
to low liKed rete. Uu equhy
for any purpose.

Lndtr

Mortgage Co .. 614-8123061.
23

Professional
Services
'"

Piana Tuning. Lane Doni~lf.
8t4-742-2951 . Also: Bo~y
Grand Plano for 1110. F....

!

delivery and tuning.

Piano tuning and repair. tu~

up for tho holldoyo, opeclo

discount. Ward'a Keyburd,

304-676 -6600
3824 .

01

117&amp;1

tales experience

Engineering
abilities

and

drafting

Willing to spend 2 nighll out
porweok

Self auperviaor and motivetor
Ability to communicate both

written ond orally
tntereotedl

Piene ,.nd resume includ·
ing experience. education
and aelary history to : Workmen Oevelopmen11 Inc.,

Forks of Coot tnduotrlal
Park , Alum

Creek , WV

26003.
No phone calla pteooot .

'

Have Your Trophy Mounted By

Co""•" Qu•Rtg, Not Ptle•12-2-

tetd Payment . No
Experience-No Sates. De·
tails send self·addreued

RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER SERVICE . Ettoto, 8400-lt 200 month. part·
farm. antique, Uquidation time . 14 , 000 - I 6, 000
soteo. Licenoed Ohio ond month full · time . Cell1 -304·
Welt Virginlo . 304-n3 - 342-0021 .
6786 or 304· n3-6430.

9

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S. ,

Wanted To Buy

We pay ca1h for late model
clean used cars.

licensed Clinical Audiologist

Jim Mink Chtv.-Otdo Inc.
Bill Gena Johnson

614-448-3872

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

WANTED TO BUY uoed
wood

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
8·13 tfn
-

polis go down river on At ., ~,"!

tum right on Rt. 218, tho~

about 2 mil11 or firtt rOtfEI
right to Kriner Ridge Road. a

Work!

Coli t -304-342-0018.

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

carpet. rurel water. electric

and out building. From G•tlt-

lew hundred feet on Krllltt
to first house on right. CoD.
1600.00 per 100.Guoron- 614-448-2917.
Auembly

supervisor. part-full time.

mo.

garage. atorm windowa / rt l
frig ., ltOVI &amp; Wll"-'

mes bills, limited time start

Nattonal Guard and you

Taxidermist

Gotllo High School. RoducJto t29.900. Colt 814-"3188711 .
• •
A handyman's opportunil'f
for profit: Green Sch,oot
dtotrlct. 2 otory houoo wlth

up leo- FREE . Call 614-448- T acre with houn. 2 bdr.,
rural water, aeptlc tenk ..
3368.
mobile homo hooku'pl
Looking for beautician with $12 .600. Call 614-3811
manager' sllcenee. Call&amp; 14· 9B66 .
• ·1 z1
446-7090.
SmoH 2 bedroom houoo, 11
Eaay Auembly World mites south of Gottlpotlo.
1800.00 per 100. Guaron· Priced by owner for quill'
teed payment. No ule. New wall to Wilt

LOST dog, red boned hound. have a good part- time
Sond Hilt Pt. Pteount. Colt career ···good benefits ··
monthly paycheck -- NO
304-675-6164.
LAYOFFS. Call 304-676·
3950 or t -800-642-3619.
8
Public Sale
Loose Weight , feel great &amp;
&amp; Auction
a.rn t4,000 month 11 1

A

By owner. Must Hit-moved.
3 bdr. ranch. onecargar~
walking distance from N

128,000 or bell offer. Co!\
814-448-20211 Dl 814-248AVON Soft Avon .,;.y Chriot- 9160.

THE TAXIDERMY SHOP

ltutland
Gallipolis
742·2225 or 742·2771
446-9244
9:00 A.M. • 6:00 P.M. Monday-Saturday

Homes for Sale .,,

31

--------------~
.

3 bdr. ltory 'h. full b.IHment, fuel oil heat, tlrepla.;e.

otomped envelope: Elan VI- 112 acre, C1ntenarty, eli¥•
to! · 7t 6 341 B Enterprise water. Call 814-446·304-t.l'
Rd, Ft. Pierce, FL 33482.

'
WI Wl •h All Our
Cultomm AMarrv
.Chrlltmas and AHappv
vearl

:a:
!

goted the offering.

l ·shirt and cep printing
equipment . 4-color printer,
conveyor dryer. eM.pollng
unit and cap dryer. Ukt new

Serv 1ces

LOST V-bottom aluminum
boot with swivet oeatl. Lett
seen
in Addloon
Contact
Wondott. Reword.
Boytor,
.,
To sell Avon , cot! 304-67681 4 367 53
- --- -n
- -· - - t429 .
ASK THE ARMYI NA ·
~~~~~:~c::.gy• C:~e~;g:~ TIONAL
GUARD RE ·
ldent~ying . Colt 614-446CRUITER ABOUT VACANNIW
2976 ol1er 3PM .
CIES FOR QUALIFIED
11·29-85 I mo. pd. ·' . LOST: Potomino colt . 8 PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE
.;J monrhl old . Cream color. INDIVIDUALS . Port-tlmo
Leading Creek Rd . 814- jobs with lull· time benefllt.
Coli 304-876-3960 or t 992·6903.
800-642-3619.
FOUND golden brown
puppy with white foot lo
markings red collar. Pres- BE A PART OF THE NEIGH·
2 lOCA110NS
cription Shoppe. Colt 304- BORS HELPING NEIGHBORS TEAMf Join the Army
675·6002.
New Lima Rd.
I 08 Vine St.

~

Business
Opportunity

r1111il until you have lnveeti·

Eeey

Oh.

PHONE 992 " 7075

c:J

21

Sardio Ohio. 43946 . Phone people you know. and NOT
to 18nd money through the
614-483-1606.

country living. Celt 30·1- &amp;.llperience-No aalea. Details
676-6966 or 304-676- send ootf -addreuod
3680.
otamped envelope: ELAN
VfTAL-6847 3418 Enter·
Seven kittens . Call 304· prioe Rd. Ft. Pierce. FL
675-1319.
33482.

992·2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotcuns Only
9-30-11

Time

Fill&lt;IIIWI

I NOTICE I
Wanted:old pianos. Paying
$20. &amp; $40 . each. Firotfloar THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
only . Write giving directtons . LISHING CO. recommendo
Witten Pianos . Box 188, that you do businell with

tntraductlono. 774-4485.
P.O. Bo• 6636, Charleston, Panaion, life, diaability and
wv 25302
medical ~ans
We Need:
Person knowledge in coal
4
Giveaway
preparation end mining

We Also Carry
Supplies.
IUStiUSS 'HONE
16141 992,6550

WE HAUL- BIG OR SMALL

Full

614-24'6-9134.

'864-476t . Houro:12-9p.m.

Repeat Sates
Unlimited
Market Usage
Singles. moot that opectot Vehicle, e11penses
and base

311 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

'JOHN C. EILIN
GA.AGE SEIIYICE
lt. 2, Cool•lllt

t
t

bebyoltting In my

do

home at Quail Creek. Call

Mining and-or industrial

1·3·1fc

Sycamore

Will

One certified Medical Tec:h -

304-67

Farm E,ulp11111t
Parte &amp; Ser•lee

PH. 992-5682
. or 992-7121
ICUT OUT FOI fUTU•E uSE)

SWEEPER and ~ewing ma·
chine repair. partJ, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery , Davis Vacuum

A. A.A.

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized Johq Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hoa
Farm Equipment
· Dealer

107

Deer hidn. Selling-trapping
supplies . Wheat and nita
litea. George Buckley. 614 -

Emp loyment

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
. SINGlE 124.9S
•live entertainment
' Free HBO •Restaurant
•Olympic Pool

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

18 Wanted to Do

Middleport. Oh. 6t4-992· Witt do odd jobs. Colt
3476.
304-876-2419.

Racine .Gun Shoot apon- notogilt. weekdeyo. Send
oored by Racine. Gun Club. reaume
or appty to Medical
Every Sunday, beginning at Plaza, 203 Jackson Pike,
1:00 p.m. Foctory Choke 12 Galtipotla. Oh 45631 .

Also Transmission

3-24-tfc

3 Announcements

MOTEL

SALES &amp; SERVICE

CIICU
COIITIAcnNG

c....... llllltilhtt

bert Whaley.

Rl. 62 SOUl~
POINT PIUIANT, W. VA.
8 mites from

915·4119

POMEROY,O.
992-2259
RACINE - 2 story home
with 3 bedrooms ~ mwn.
Gas FA heat, large rooms, ~
good condition. $16,500.00.

Ho1pital for the kindness
shown during the recent
death of my father . William
Clonch . Mr. and Mrs . Her-

Home Decorating Open

BOGGS

SiJes Start From 12'd6'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to ~4'x~6'
Insulated Doa Houses

wAre. old coins, la·rge cur-

guage shotguns.

Gllllpollt, Ohle
7/ 11/tln

11·26·1 mo.

STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

Department and Emergency

AUTO

Wotdo for Signs

Card of Thenks

Ul'f.i t and Veterans Memorial

PH. 992-7201

"I'
St. Rt. 160 'llorlh

sons in my home. Al1o teach
cording and transpollng .

STANDING TIMBER . At
Tromm . Colt : 614-742 We want to thank the 2328.
Middleport Chief of Police
Sid Little, Middleport Fire Buying Raw Fur. Beef end

U·SA~E

RESIDENCE

ALL

1

"W• ,..,., f, llll"

flatwDDtls ld. Co. ld 26
2 IIi. from fl¥1 Poilu

coins. rlngs. jawelry.sterling
renc y. Top pr ices. Ed . Bu rkett Barber Shop ; 2nd . Ave.

JIM CLIFFORD

446·4522
,

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPliANCE

E. M•inli.lo

No Purcha• lllce-ry

Ingels Furniture &amp;Jewelry

992-5875 Or
742-3195

3/11/tfn

Announceme nts

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Call:

•• Dtty

'AcREAGE - 48 acres, m/1, wrth tree gas for four bedroom
ranch home. Private, ideal location, 5 minutes from town.
PRICE REDUCED, $45,000.00.

,,.... II

FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial

gold . silver

Buying daily

304-372-5

Bashan Building

COMPACT
MICROWAVE OVEN

C~rltl•u Sell

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

fleal Estate General

Register to Win
Aft1CU1CI Rada1 GJYe

Middleport

"Free EstiiTt&amp;t!IS"
PH. U9•2801

•GIBSON REFRIGlRA10R
•SATIWTE SAllS l SERVICE
Wi lu1 AFell Tl••
lli•t Tlt~tlel .. ·

Geo. S. Hobstetter, Jr.,

CrtMIIt Terms

New Homes Built

•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY

)tOME NATIONAL

:
•

Select 26 cu. ft .
Amana Ice N' Watert• .
Refrigerator• at

Amlllll W11hera 1nd Dryera
.nd Plll'l

Delivery

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•SYLVANIA

•

MGM Farm City 1·
Servl'ce

12-5-1 mo.

*VINYl SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
'ILOWN IN
INSULATION

Situations
Wanted

Miller, Rt .2. Pomeroy. Ohio

45769 or call 614-992·
7760.

CLINIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PUASANT OFFICE
305 Jack10n bt.
SMAll ANIMAl HOURS
Mott.-Wtd.-Tirun. 3-5 pm
Tuoi. 6:30·1: Fri: 1-2 pm
lalurday 10-11:30 am
LAIGE ANIMAl &amp;
SUIGEIY BY APPl.
PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AIEl CALL
Ripley Office
For Hours ·

992-5738

•lEN IT~

1

ONLY

Sulect Full Size
Rodorongee Countertop
Microwave Ovens From

Christmas

V. C. YOUNG Ill
"2-6215 or 992·7314
Pemeroy, Ohio

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

'

fts of Quality

$54900

1

R1cine, Oh.
Ph,. 614-843·5191
10-6-lfc

13 BEOROOIIIIOBILE HOllE
•on 3 lots in Sy11cuse.

1

From

POMEROY
CROCHETED
HATS
IN YOUR COLORS
Many Other Crafts
Available

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

'•

~~to~ll~A~-~M~-a~nd~1~-3~P-~M~.;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~;;;;;~;;;;~~

Select 18 cu. ft.
Amana Top Freezer
Refrigerators

115 IIICUT.

12

and silver . Write- M. D. 614-992-5403 .

YETIRINAIIAN

AI

- Roofing end tuner work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing .and electric.!

cheats, baskets , dishel •
atone jars, antiquea, gold

&amp;COUNTRY

TOWN

OPEN IMURSDAY

- A.ddont and ~modeling

Wanted To Buy

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Beds, iton. Give piano and organ lea·
wood. cupboards. chain,

; pond. Rleine ••·

AGRI BOSS

12 YOLI-6 VOLT

11-21-3 ....

•' SPUT uva IIOUSl with 3
: btdioams, 2 cotftllltt• bitlis,
• dininc room. iivirc r00111111d
; llfJI I'ICitllion room. lo. Cllld on 81eres. La-p farm

Battery Sale
COMPLETE LINE Of
FARM AND AUTO

Pl. 742·2050

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

..

·- -

THRU liJNDAY

1·1-

The
9

~--------~ ··r
- ~7.=~~~

Or Write D1il1 St11li1tl Clnsillfl O"t
111 Co.rt St.. Po1111n~y . Ollio &amp;571!

11

CARPENTER

worl&lt;
(Free Eotlmotool

Copy S.nicts, Etc.
2SS Mil St. llioWttpert
104 Mullottry A• .. '•moroy

·THE HAT RACK

SERVICE

PWS: Offill s.,,lts &amp;
Furniture, Wodtliog

Worked in ·home 1ree

YOUNG'S

10-8-tfc

Select

MEN'S BOOT CUT
REG. 12'3.99

A total of 35 calls were answered

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

; REAL ESTATE IS OUR
• ONLY BUSINESS WITH
:CERTIFIED APPRAISALS.

BOYS'

DENIM LEVI'S

35 fire calls made
in Middleport area

The Daily Sentinel

.

FROM DAN'S
BLACK

control on an icy road and struck a
pickup truck. Separate car accidents killed four other people, and a
Greyhound bus passenger died
when the driver lost control on
lnterstate 70 and the rus toppled off
a bridge 25 teet down a ravine.
"It's very slick out there. It's
pretty glassy," state pollee dispatcher Frank Martin said of the
conditions op Interstate 71!. "Pretty
much the only way It could have
been avoided was If nobody had been
traveling."
In Marion, Minn., three people
were killed and 12 others btjured In a
chain-reaction accident on a snowcovered highway in Olmsted
County.
Anemergencyairservicehellcopter !lying from Ohio through dense
fog hit a tree In Michigan and
crashed In a field, killing two on

Village funds
total $381.902

Area deaths

.-•'"

·•

Wednesday, December 11, 1985

Mighty storm front dumps
mixed bag of wintry weather

•

.

Wednesday. December 11, 1988
•

•••

.,.'

-

Pomeroy-Middl8port, Ohio

·-

~,..,_

&amp;

coal heaters .

Southwestern Community
Action Council. Inc. 11 IC cepting applications for their
child and family develop·
ment program et the Mt .
Olive Head Start Cen1er in
Aehton . One teaching attlstant, one famllv aervlt:ea
worker, one food service
worker, Mus t heve hfgh~

school diploma "'GED and
Cllr

with velid driving li·

SWAIN'S FURNITURE, 3rd. cense . For application c:ome
&amp; Olivo St. Gottlpotlo. Colt between 9:00 AM and 6:00
PM, 640 5th Ave., Huncing614-448-3189.
ton, before 6:00 PM MonUHd piano good cond. Call doy Dec. 18th. S.C.A.C..
Inc . is an EEO employer.
614-446-3903.
Want to buy, pipe Of culvert

Federal, State, &amp; Civil Ser-

Houae : 8 room• &amp; bath, W:tt~i
garage. in country, coun6jl
water, % acre. S19 .5001'\

Ctti814-6B2-1417.

3 bdr. ranch, 1\-\ both, lull!
basement . 2 car garage. IJ.I

neighborhood, city ochoolo1
Rt. 36 Sunklot Sub. 1'0"0 '
mo .. ref. &amp; dep. required:•
Colt 61 4-448·9664.
II
I
By owner. Remodeled 3
bedroom houae on At. 33 ~ 1

New F.A. fumoce. Iorge let.!
123.000. Collect 614-42;t,10
6289 .
. I
,

By owner. Stately, 3 btf. ~
room houae It 10 E. St. IJt!
Pomtuoy. 6 wooded acraa,
family room, dining room,F.A. heat, 2 batha, ball\~

mont , garage. $27,000.•
Collect 614·423-82B9. '3

6 rooms &amp; bath. deck porch ,\!

1 floor plan . Nice location ,:

Call Bitt Wittiemoon,
trend . 614-742-2007.

A new home for the hall -~
daya . Older home -oak 1

woodwork-In town Racine.~
New oak kitchen, wtth a~ tr
pli1ncn, living room, dlnirlfl lil,
room , 3 bedrooms. bat~

614-949·2640 after 8:30;
p.m. $36,000.00.
• ''
In Middleport. 3

bedroom~,~.-

1% baths, carpeting . mod- u;

ern kitchen, drlperlea. manftl

extras. EC. Call 614-992'-'•
6072 .

;

Exterior complete· lnterior X

roody to complete. All brlc- ~

energy efficient. three
room rancher, sitting
acre.
·
on

3646 for information .

12

Homes
for Sale

Situations
Wanted

Wontod to buy, Brownie
Uniform. Slat 8 or 7. Cell
814-949-2093 oftor 8:00"'

our homo. Trained ond flf.

on wMkends.

e 14-992-7314.

V.cency for the elderly In

teen yeert experience. Call

?j

992-3676 for appointment.~

' lOP CASH poid for '83
· SmHh Buick-Pontiac. 1911
Etotom Ave ., Gatttpolio. Coli
614-448-2282.

Ru -~

5 room house near Pomeroy~
for ule or trade. Call 814·~

3-4ft. diameter. Call 614- vice Jobs now avllable in only. Colt
your arae. Coli 1-618-469388·9881 tvenlngo.
model and newer used cars .

..,' 1

NEW AND USED
HOMES KESSEL'S
tTY MOBILE HOME
4 MI. WEST,
RT 36.
7274.
I'

�Page-12- The Daily Sentinel
32 Mobile Home•

72

LAFF·A·DAY

for Sale

Kenmore Walher·dryer

w••h•r *1 215. Kenmore

bdr., goo hoar. U .900. Call
et4-446·0t75.
10•60 1963 2 bdr.. Now

Moon. new Clrpet, excellent
condition, *3 ,900 . Coli
814· 448-0t76.

11·''

r

42

MollilttlltJilea
for Rant

Furnio'lod. AC, coblo. no dty
toxeo, beoutiful riv&gt;r viow in
Konougo.
Footoro Mobilo
H
p
omt ork. Coli 814-448·
t802.

Extro Nicol Coli 814·2118·
8187
or 814·868·11187.
'
tt70 Schuhz, 12•60. Total
ollc1ric. 2 bldroomo. oir
. d G
ld
d
..
" " · · tno • on ou1·
3V4-B82-2422.

2 bclr on Rt. 7. furniohod.
wotor ,.id, no inoido ,....
Coll 814 ' 245 · 58 tB .

c ·

t4x70 3 bdr .. In Centenary .
Coil614-448-4292 .
t4•10 2 bedroom troller
with bedroom room oddl·
2
tlon on 20 ocroo w~h !roo
"
gao . 1250. par month .
Cauld work oomo of "'"t
out. 814·247-4751 ao 304·
273-286t.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED:
in)IUrecl. roooonoblo roteo,
•75 233•
Coli 304... .
•
lll!obiit homo for uit, mull
...1 t972 12•6&amp;. Schultz
wJth 7•11 ••pondo. 3 bed·

rooms. wood burner. air
cqnditiontr. waaher &amp; dryer,

2 bedroom mobile home
near A acine . 614 · 992 -

P4rtlolly furnlohod, oil op·
plloncoo. 2 porchoo llo under·
pl~ning. t8.400. Call 304·
. 882· 2888.

6868.
Mobile home for r•t fur·

nlohed, 2 bdr. , goo hoot. Call
onytimo, 304·1175· 8372.

Filr oolt or rent t2•80
mobile homa . Coii304· BB2·
2428 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

Farma for Sale
JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunl.ty}
monthly Nnt otono at tt69
lor 1 bedroom ond 1204 for
2 bedroom, dopooit 1200,
located noor Spring Volley
1'1111 ond Foodlond, pool
ond Coble TV ovoillblo,
office houra 11 pooalblo 10
omto4 pmond7pmto9pm
Monday-Friday, Coli 114·
446 - 2745 or leova

t 011 ocro farm far oala. Coli
614·388·8t39.
A!'PI• Grovo 100 ocroo.
lofl!O born t20x28, 1 .300 It
fron..ge on Jerry'• Run
Rood, 5 mlloo from Goodyoor Plont. Mlnorol rlghto.
Wont olfar. Clyde Bowen,
Jr. 304-576·2338.

ITMIINgl.

Lots &amp; Acreage

Nicely lurnlohod mobilo
Farm tot ule: no houM, 2 home, eH. ~pt ., Clntral eir
barna. county Wlter &amp; MJ)tl(l , and hut in city' lduttl only,
tonk . Coil 6t4·379·22111.
Colll14·4411·0338 .
RedacoNted opt.. 2 bclr ..
1160 IQ 1250. Coli 304·
876 -5104 or 304-175·
11388 or 304·676-7898 .

Why ,.Y double prico7 Wo
build big 4 bclr . Early Amori·
con Homoo I 18,996 . New
modol opon . Call 814·888·
731t .

Upotolro unfurnlohed opt.,
carpeted, oil utiiHioo ,.id, no
children, no ,.,,, Coli 8·t 4·
446-1837.

F.. niahod opt. 2 bdr., t31'11
4th, Goilipollo, tt95 wotor
Ranch otyle, nico 2 bdr. poid. Coli 448 -44t e after
horne, 2 full botho. 'Ill bl. ?PM .
from Wooh. Elem.. t326,
rof. req . Call 814 · 446 · Now efficiency opt . Coli
614-448-0390.
2168.
Hou . . a for Rent

Furniohed houoo, 241 Jock· 740'h Second AVo. 3 bdr.,
oon Plko. Gollipolio. t200 t190 mo.. dop . roquired .
wotor ,.ld, 2 bdr. Coli Call 614· 446-4222 be·
t - n 9 &amp; 5.
448-44t8 oftor 7PM .
2 bclr.. unfumiohed houn
with gorogo. Rol. &amp; Dop.
required . Call 814 - 441 ·
9086.

Delu•e 2 .bdr. downtown.

optton to buy or •II. owner

Furnithed apt., 4 rooms •

comploto kitchen, all oorpot,
wooher, dryer, oloctrlc hoot
llo AC. Dop. required . Coli
doyo614· 448·4383, avo. &amp;
3 bdr, 2 car gtrage. on At. w11kondo 814-448·0138 .
180 by N.G.H.S .. rent whh

wll finonco . Coli 814-246· both, no ,.to, odulto. Avolio·
blo Dec: . 1. Call 814·448·
11126.
1618.
3 bdr., lorgo kitchOII, nlcel - : - - - : - - -- - ·utlllty room. 1 cor
largo 5 room upotolro opt. ,
t285 mo. Rot.
dop fumlohed kitchen, UOOmo.
roqulrod . Call 614 · 448 - pluo utllltloo, 238 111. Avo.
1358.
Rot. &amp; dop, no poll . Coli
e t4· 44&amp;·4928 .
2 bdr duplu, t200 mo .. I-:---:----Sac . dop. &amp; ref. roquirod. 5 roomo &amp; both. Locotod
Coli 814· 446-0254.
Crown City . Newly daco·
rated. electric atowa a. retrie .
3 bclr .. 8'11 mileolrom Holzer No ,.... Call 61 4·256·
Hoopltol. 1300 mo.. It 110 1222.
dop .. no poto. Coli 814-388· 1- : : - - - : - - - - - 9783 .
Furn. opt . lor rent, uoMitleo
paid, f236 mo. Call lAM·
238 roor Firot Ava .. 2 bdr. &amp;PM, 814-448·9244 .
fumlohed kitchen, t225 mo. 1-:-:-:--:---:-:--:--- Rof. &amp; dop, no peto . Coil Furnlohod opt. 920 4th Avo ..
814·448·4928 .
Ooillpolls, ono bclr .. t280
util~ioo peid, edulto . Coli
Rant· cozy cottoga. 3 roomo l -;;
4-4 8-;:·-:44
:;-:-:
18•ft
-:or-7_P-,M
_._ _

rrog•.

In Mlnoravillo by the Bulk
plont. 1 bedroom houoo.
Totol sloatrlc. Paniolly fur·
niohod. 614 ·992·6215 or
et4-992-7314.
Efficiency cottogo. 155.00
w11k, utllltioo paid, phone
304-875 · 3100 or 675 ·
'508.

2 bedroom epartmenu .
Now Hoven, WVo . Nowly
romodalod. In town. 114·
992-748t .

1:-::-::-------

Middleport duple•. 1 bed·
room opt. ft70 . pluo utHi·
tieo. Aloo 2 bedroom, tot.
floor opt. tt90 . pluo utili·
tloo. Cell 6t4·992·7177.

3 bedroom unfurnished
apanment for rent In Syracuoo. Coli 8t4-892·7188
oftor 5 p.m.

1--------in Jericho orao . Coli 304· EHoncloncy oportmont. 2

Twobedroomhouaeforrent

875·1483 after 8 PM .
Large hou" and apertment,
unlurnlohod . 304· 675 ·
13&amp;5.

1---------

Rolnbow Yocuum Cleonar
for
. 12110.
Good3003.
condl·
tlon.oale
Coli
814· 742·

1
- -Flaohlrlg
--Sovo-110%11
onow

roomo, both, full booamont .
Furnlohod . In Pomeroy
above Krogoro. 814·982·
8216 or 814-892·7314.

44

Apartment
for Rant

64

-

Flrowood·cutup olobo, 1

Misc . Merchandise

4 'i Fumlshad Rooma truck lood 1100. 2- nso.

For •ont Siooping Roomo
and 'ght houoo kooping
roomo . Pork Control Hotel.
Call 514 448-0756 .
Houooknpio ·q room, rongo.
mrlg .• ohore bath. male
profonod. utilltieo pd. lt2&amp;.
Coll448·4418 oftor 7pm .

46

Space for Rent

Pick up loed • you houl 1111.
~!:.~ ~~ptod. Coil 814 ·

8

1-::-------- -- - - - -- - - Houoa
llo stoker.
Zlnn cool.
Co.Lump
Co 1181
4 _448 •
1408.

c..;

CoHohon'o u-~ Tiro Shop.
....
o -t t .ooo
...... t2,
•tireo
13 • 4 • t 5 , 1 "·
1..• .5. Bmlloo
out Rt. 218. Coll6t4·2118·
82llt .

Flrwwood 140 PU loed doll·
vered . 8 ft . landscape
Mobile homo lot, 12'x50' or timberol4.110 oa .. lfi. sooth
omoller, t75 wotor ,.ld. 4th pino llvo X-11111 INOI bollod
llo Noll, Gallipolio. Coli 448· llo burloped 132.60 oa ..
4411 olter 8PM .
Mulch. Coli 814 ·448·"1799
do yo or 814· 448-9848 ottor
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo 8pm.
Pork, Route 33, North ol
Pomeroy. Lorge loto. Coli Spoclol pricoo on wild bird
8t4·992-7479.
-d. ounflo-r, da-iclrlg
..h. r1t poi10n, protein
Troller opocoo. Small child· blocko. Found ottho Bldwoll
ron occoptod. Out Rt. 1. Mill, 614-388· 9888.
loculi Rood, beck of K&amp;K. l- - - - - - - - 1-304-875-t078.
Firewood lor oole UO
pickup loed. Ookwood only .
Call 814 · 388 · 8144
anytime.

61 Household Good•

Konnlbeck potorooo. turkeyo
for oolo. Coli 614· 387·
7230.

Chriotmoo TNio. Rodney·
Bidwell Rood. 1'1• mlloo
SWAIN
.
from Rodney. Coli Floher:
AUCTION llo FURNITURE 114·245-5241 .
82 Olivo St ., Gollipollo. N&amp; uood wood·coolotovoo, I Sm~h llo Weoaon outo. ohot·
~ kood LR ou~• 1399, gun, ox. oond. Call lt4·
n bodo t199, ontron 241.B112 .
rocllnoro •99, now 1 uood 1--_;,..:.:.._ _ _ _ __
bedroom sult11, r1ngea, Wa ''' over mocked with
wrlng~~r walhers, &amp; ahoes. Necchl sewing machin11
Now llvlngroom oultu modo of motel. 211 year
1199-U99, lompo, oloo worronty. mokeo button
buylrlg cool llo wood olovoo. holoo, otrelch ot~cha, proCall 814-448-3t59.
fenlonol otichoo, doolgn
IIHcheolo mor~. Juotootdlol
&amp; - · Rog. prlco t491,
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
now thruJon. 86 1188. Coli
Sofloond ahoirof.lcedfrom collect 81 4·388·8028 .
12B5. tu till . obloo, ISO Vance Loach Homo Fumloh·
ond up to 1126. Hldo·o- lng, Logon, Oh 28 yearo 1r1
bedo,U90 . ond up to buolneu.
t&amp;IIO .. aofa bodo lt411.1-::------ - Rocllnoro. 1225. to t375.. Firewood 11rg1 loedo doll·
Llmpo from 128. to I 1211. vored 1t ked 13" 1o 1
' of
oc town. Coli
• deyo
co •
pc. dlnottoo from t10B .. aa t40 out
4311. 7 pc. tt89 ond up . 814·446 ·B743, ovanlngo
Wood tllble whh olx cholro I 1 4-446· 9344.
12111 to 17411. Oook 1110
up to U25 . Hutcheo, tti&amp;O . Atori 5200, o•c. cond, 185
Bunk bed comploio whh firm. Coll114· 448·4120.
nnottrooaoo, 1276 . ond up to
a398 . Baby bodo, t110 . Antique vanity t7tl.ontlquo
Mottrooooo or box oprlngo, high choir t40, 2 ohelllompo
lull ortwln.l83 .• firm, 173. UO ooch . Coil 814-448·
ond U3 . Qulin ooto, t2211 . 4514.
4 dr. chooto, 149. 5 clr · l:-=: - : - - -- - chollo, t6B . Bod fromu, t975 Ford Grond Torino
120.ond 125., 10gun· Gun vory nice ohope. 1983
coblnoto, U&amp;O. Gu or Hondo t103whoolorl700.
oloctrlc rong~o t3711. Baby Coli 614-387-0594.
nnot1ro110o, *25&amp; t35 , bed 1 -:-----~~-­
lrsmoo 120, tz&amp;, &amp; 130. Ml•od hardwood olobo. 112.
klngfroma 180. Goodooloc· ,.r bundle, contlllnlng op·
tion of bedroom ou~eo, pro•. 1V. ton, fob . Ohio
rockers, metel c1blneta Pellet Co:. Pomeroy, Ohio.
hoodboordo 138 &amp; up ra Phone 814 ·992·6481 .
185 .
1-:-_ __ _:,....:..;,_ _
Seve 60 ,.rcentll Fllohing
Uood FurnHure · · Dreoaor, &amp; onow olgno t27911 Lighted.
bed, motel office dooko. 3 non-arow 12119. Unlighted
mlloo out Bulovillo Rd . o,_n 1209,. (Froa lottorol} Sao
Born to &amp;pm, Mon . thru Sot. locally. (800} 423·0183,
8t4-446·0322
onytlmo. (800} 828-2B28.
.... 604.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 1-::- -- - -- - Walhera, dryers, refrlger1- Browning triP gun, BT99 .
taro. rong~o. Skoggo Ap- 341n. full choke. EC. t600 .
plloncoo, Uppor Rlvar Rd. 814· 992· 7183.
beoido Stone Croll Motol . l-::: - : - - - -- -814·448·7398·
Hord wood firewood for
oale. Coli 814-742-21145.
C oun t y A pp II once , Inc .

1---------

Good uaed epplillncea and

now, 1200. Call 304·871·
2
t&amp;2 oftor liPM .
Lovo - • wHh motchlng
choir • ottomon· gold.
1200. Coli 304· 876·1238
4 30
otter ' ·
- - Potch
- -dollo.
- -2·-CobboQI
Mr.
T Dollo. Coli 304·675·
54110.

Humphrey gea hllltr .

Diamond ongagomont 11o
wedding ring lot, con be
romountod. e•collont condl·
tlon . Coll304·87tl·t622.
Spoclouo room divider, ~1
gun cabinet. Solid dark
wolnut. Both like now. Coli

304-~78-4338.

66

Building Suppliaa

Building M-illo
Block, brick, oowor pipoo,
windows , lintell , etc .
Claude Wlrlt...,, Rio Orondo,
0. Coli 6t4·2411·512t .
Kentucky Lump, Ohio Lump,
Ohio Stoker. Yard or dollv·
ory, cement blocko oild
building motorial. Galllpollo
Block Co .. Plno St .. Galllpollo. Ohio Call 114· 4411·
2783 .

2 br e,.rtmonll In Hondor·
oon . 304· 675·1872.
I·N
- Ic-e- - ,-n-d- - -br_o_,.
_rt
_ monto
__
1
2
downtown. 304·8711·22t8
• 8-8

. · · ·------w------~--·I

•

WEDNESDAY

t970 Jeep y, ton flatbed, .
4.-WD t6i)O. 1918 Duno
buggy otroot legol. fib'orgloao .
body, nrbuiH engine, $700·. :
Remo anei'e drum &amp; stick
12&amp;. Coli 304-882· 2092 . • · •

~=====· =~•

'::7

plywood with fibtrgleat
Ninforcod I - - · 8' Wide

oton, Ohio. Coli lt4·384·
3848.

Livestock

Llveotock Chrlotmeo Sele,
wollorn IPPINI llo accoaoi·
rueom horoo llo born oquip·

f!'·th~f::.;:.~r~, r:::r. 3ci'te7:~n~nJiv~~~~~

304-875-7119.

Collaftor 7:00P.M.

1:;::;:::;=;:::;::===

WHI tho lody who bNOdo
Somoyedo, piMoo coli ogoln
bo t C1 ri T It 304
n orr r,
·
"

!75~383 8.
67

Mu1ical
lnltrumenta

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Timothy hoy t1 . t 0 1 bolo.
Coli 814-248-9526 .
per pound . Prote..ionelycut
• wrapped . 1JJ or whole.

814 ·992· 7713 .
Hohnor ocoordlon very good
condition, oloo whitt unl·
formo olzo 14 and 15- 18 .
con 114-387-0&amp;18.
Glboon Dove gultor FG· 75
Yomoho gunor, Koy flvo
llrlng bongo. Coll814-448·
Bl39 .

68

Hoy for oalo. •1 .25 bolo.
largo ornounll f1 .00. 614·
98&amp;·4291.
Good Hoy t1 .60 bolo, aooy
occooo. Redmond Ridg~.
Coll304· 875-1104 .

I r~nsporL1t1on
Fruit
&amp; Vegetable•

71
Big 1111 oppleo rnountolrl
grown, light vorletloo. TRick
loed, orangoo, Novel, Tonge·
loo, Grop11, Banonos.
7 doyo. 1 :00 to 11:00. Jack'o
Fruh Mkt, Rt. '35, Hondor·
oon.

o,..

I .Ifill Suppl''''
6 L1v' ~.tu, k
61 '

Farm ·Equipment

CROSS&amp; SONS
U.S . 35 Wolt, Jackoon,
Ohio. 814-288· 6411.
Mooaoy Forguaon, N- Hoilind, Buoh Hog Soloo llo
Service. Ovor 40 Ulod !roc·
tore aa . ahoooa from 11o
oomplotollno of MW llo uood
oqulpmant. Llrgaot oaloc·
tion in S.E . Ohio.

burners, fretttlnding. flre-

placo lnoono &amp; lurnoco
odd·ono. Good oolactlon of
uood troctora &amp; other uood
oqulp. Coli 814· 448-1875.

Autos for Sale

1878

.vw , 9alrocco ,

good

cond., priced under whole·
lllo value. Coil 814-446 2048ovon .

tor runs good , clean

u .aeo. tilt. buoh hog good
12.9110. Coli 114·286·
8522 .

300 lntornotlonol utility
loedor. 814·643·6402 oftor
7 :30p.m.

Brllrpotch Konnolo All ·
brood grooming. Aduho &amp;
pupploo . Englloh Cocker
Sponlelo. 388·9780.

John Deere 10 in. hammer-

Drogonwynd Cottory Konno!. CFA Hlmoloyon, Porolon
ond Slemooo klttono. AKC
Chow pupploo. Coil 448 ·
3844 oftor 7PM.

131 tobacco boloi boxoo
11 ft . bUoh hog a3oo. To·
bocco otlcko 18 conto aoch.

Gerrn1n wirehaired pointer

t1.600 . 28 ' tobecco pipe
troller. (3001 4"x4" • 12'
and 16' ook tlmbero. Home·
IHo cholrloaw • 1 00. Mor·
gon'o WoodlownForm. 304·
175 · 12B8 or
304-623·5843 .

TV 1011. Open 8/iM to 6PM 83,000 BTU whh thermooMon thru Sot. 81 4· 448: to
db
1889, 827 3rd. Avo. Galli· 9;2~;80~war. 1175. 814pollo, OH. ·
1-::-:--- - - - - 0inlng room table llo buffet. AKC Gormon 8hophordo
Volley Furniture, now &amp; 8 choiro. Ught ook. 614- block llo tan, or block llo oliver:
uood. Largo nction of qual· 9811· 4291 .
rudy Ooc. 9 . Col16t4·388·
lty furniture . 1216 Eootarn 1-::----- - - - B4140 before 7 :30p.m .
Avo .. Golllpollo.
TONY'S GUN REPAIRS ,
Pitt Bull puppioo 5 waoko,
E·Z Crodlt Mollohon Furnl· hotdlproblu...,g,olltyposol pur~ br11d pupploo, II mo.
gunom~h work, foot oorvlco,
ture, Rt. 7 North ol Golllpo· 304-878-4831 .
Coli 614 · 318 · 1111
lio. Colll14 -448-7444 .
evenlngt.
Lump houoo cciol, llmollono,
2 llvingroom cheln, French gr1v1l, And delivtfed, one Ro~ robb~ll with or without
Provinclel otyllng, avocado ton ond up. Jim Llnlor, pedlgroo ollpo. Coil 114·
color, o•collent condition . 304· 876 · 7397 or &amp;711 · 448-tt49 .
185 ooch or tt26 for both. 1247 .
Coil 814·446-0t23 eftar
Young hoolthy Por1k11t
6:00PM .
1 oot beglnnoro golf clubo '"'"doro, Lovo blrdo, Cocke·
with bog, nico Chrlotmoo tlolo, boby Mlno bird, Cocko·
Wootinghouoo t8 ft . !root· gilt, 160. Coli 304-773- too. Aloo commarclol Mw!roo rofrlgorotor wllh leo 6150 .
I n g ·m o c h 1n e .
mokorl360. Aloo, 30" olea ,
814·8811·4212 evanlngo.
rongo 1200. Coli 814-448 · Lump cool houlod t42 .00
7827.
ton. Coli 304-8711·""00.
AKC Lhooa Apoo pupo,
h.fclot5t
moloo only. 20 chlmplonolrl
For Bolo. SURPLUS, 'CAll · podlgNO, gontlo, qulot and
Wolllnghouoa 1 e ft . troll· HART, ARMY, DENIM lovlrlgdogo. 304,871·11837
!roo rofrlg~rotor w~h leo CLOTHING . lnoulotod Do· or 171·2223. "tolllttoloto
moklr t310. Aloo, 30" oloc. cron covorollo comoulloraed lvoo uo",
rongo noo. Coli &amp;14-441· UO. (Orong~orgroon dll),
7827.
Som Sommarvllll'o EaotRo· Porokllto, bobloo, braadoro,
vonowood, Wva .. Fri., Sor., COJIII. Coli eftor 5:00 304Dlnotto oat whh II owlvol Sun . t :00·7:00 PM. (other . 1711·6030.
cholro *1215, mini ph llvlrl· ovanlngo oftor IPM} Cloood 1--:::::-:-- - - - - gloom oulto UIIO, RCA 18 Soturdoy Doa. 14, Sundoy · AKCiollonTorrlorpupploo,
ln. color TV t1211. Coli 18. CKido ComoufloQI) ·Do· rHdy by Chrlotmoo. Coli
llvory 304-1711-3334.
304·1711·3882 eftor 11:00
814·448 · t316 - r IIPM.

mill, lloo rubber be~ llo four
ICrllno. f100. 8t4-94B·
2131 .

•ee.

2 row tobacco aetter
•1 .400. A model lntorno·
cultivator•

'

81

7:05
7:30

,

· Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondhionolllfetlme guor~ntee. Local reference• ~
furnished. free estlmatea .~- · '
Coli collect 1·814·237··.
0488, day or night. Roger•
BaHment Waterproofing .• .

7:35
8:00

1

-:---~-_:___;,__;,:....;~ ,,.• f

~. ~nd M. Contractor•. Vinyl: ::
11dmg, replacement win · · .- :
dowa, inlulatlng, roOfing , ~ '::6
new and remodeling, con· •'.J

J.ond L. lnolollation . Rodt. • :~
in g. vlnylaiding.atorm doo'ra end window• . Free estl-

meleo. Cell614 · 992·277~ .
COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Aiel,

t978 Muotong Cobra good
oond., Rio Gronde, •1.800 .
Collll14·241·8536.
t977 Plrlto vrogon, Colifor·
nil c.r no

n.~at.

AULEYOOP

Nrvice. Regi·, .

Houu cella on RCA, Quazar,

.

'??
-

Dor~

fll ()) MARY-It'l Now·Miry

*

GE . Spoclollng In Zonith .
Coll304·1178-2398 ar 614448-2464.
.

CBS '"'·
Mary Newly dl·
vorced Mary Brenner IIndo
horoell pogotloting for o

1 B82 Cutlooo Supreme
Broughom, auto, V-8. po,
,pb, olr, crulao. YGC. 814·
.992·118110 doyo, or 81 4·
912·3817.

murderer' I excluaive atory
when she takes over a
'Helpline' column on a sen ·
ntlonalist newapaper.
Cll MecNeii·Lihr~r Nowohour
.

That animal ·i5

1DB3 Ford Eooon . FWD. 4
op.. E:c . U4oo. 114· 742·
3083.
1-~-----1964 Lincoln Town cor. Low, RMollry
orl cable
tool drilling.
oot wolo
completed
oamil
mllelgo . bcollont ohopo. doy. Pump oaloo and oorvlce.
Fully oquippod . *13,000. Or 304·8Btl-3802
beot olfor. 814·985-3596
or 6t4-88B -3684.
Get yourcorpot in ohlpohopo

,
'",
"'
•;
"

with Captain Steamer, furnl-

-t.

wrecked, repairable or for

pono, t9110. or boll 18110·
noble off&lt;rr. Coli 304·876·
3628.
1978 Coprlco clonic, AC,
PS, PB, runo good, boot offer
Will be occeptad. Coli 304·
676·3t24 oftor 5 :00PM .

72

Trucks for Sale

River Joumoyo: Tho
Nile with Brion Thompoon
(CO] Playwright and novel·

itt Brian Th ompson journeys from the south of the

......

Sudan to tho Nile Dalto .
(60 min.)
fJ) MOVIE: 'Family Rou·
nlon' Po" t of 2
(HBO} WI Aro tha World:
Tho Story Blhlnd tho Song
A behlnd·the-acenea look
ot the making of the belt·
selling record, 'We Are the
World'. (80 min.)
(MAX) MOVIE: 'Normo Rat'
8:05 CIJ Amorloan Ca-r Pan 1
of 2 The career of controveroiol
military
laodar
Generol Douglso MecAr·
thur io traced . (2 hro.)
8:30

ture clooning-wstor domogo •
work. 304·876-2295.
·.

I~;=:;=:;==== :::
Plumbing
•· H
·
"' eat;ng

WINNIE

Cor. Founh and Pine
Ge1Upoli1, Ohio

•

~:
• · '?-

(I) Cll The beot thing naxt
to MARYI-Sorloo
PNmlo,.Foloy Squtro
CBS ••··
(JJ Foloy SquoN
Manhalton Aulstont Oil·

*

Phone 814-448 -3888 or "
614·448-4477
~

a ())

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT· ~
lNG . Rt. 1, Box 355, Galli· ~
polio . Call 614·367·0676.

trict Attorney Alex Harri·

gan places 1 Peraonalo ad

83

i n a local magazine and

Excavating

prooacuteo en 85-year-old
would-be euellant.
9:00 8 (2) CD Holl T-n Father
Hardotep uvoo o girl from
a lifO in pornography lllma
and oltemptl to protect her

Good-1 Excavating, but- man11, footera, drivewev 1• .

1985 . S-10 PU , ohonbod
rodlolo, klyotoneo, 1.000
mlloo. Coli 81 4·379· 2862 .

ooptlc tonko, londocoplng.
Call anytime 61 4 · 446 ·
4537, James L. Davison , Jr.

t979 GMC 8ft . bed, topper,
305, dull e•houot, outo ..
law mUea, ..lrlll Call 814446·0073 , .... 814· 448·
2886.

Dozer Work lend clearing
landiCIIping. ate. Frtl 1111:
mateo. Ceil 614· 448·8038
or 6t4·892 ·71 19 anytime .

1978Dodgo pick-up. Heavy
V. ton. 8 ft. bed w~h new
compor top . 8 cyl .. otrolght
ohllt, lmmoculoto con d. Coli
6t4-949 -2U8.

liD

'

Storko TNI ond Llwn Sor·
vice, llndocoplng. 304·878·
2oto.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEAT.ING

owner.

-- TH' FROG

TARNED

from a threatening corpor-

INTO A HANDSOME

·

ation. (80 min.)
CII 700 Club
(]) Top Rank Boxing from
Loa v~·· lilY
()) IIIII2l Dynooty (CCI AI·

PRINCE

•
•

85

opanment,

General Hat~ling

.

..

~-

1972 Ford Ronchoro GT,
311 autome1ic, m1g1, fair

11 horooo aa pick from. Will
hold for Chrlotmoo. Coli
814· 448 ·33118.
2 flog . Sorrell quortor
moroo. 1 6 nno. old quortor
coh. Coi1114·286-11122. '
R..l nlco Horwfortl bull, 4
yro. old, gentle, 11,000. Coli
814-368·1777.

cond .. Flrot •eoo. taboo it .
Coli 304·171·3470.
- - - - - - - -1972 Chevrolet 1 ton truck,
ooll or trade. Good cond ..
now Go Cort, I HP motor,
flbro glooo body. hondmodo
dollo. Coll304·885· 3314.

DIFFe:~e:NCe:

266 -1240 or 8t4- 256 .. :
1130. Re11onable retea.
l

1 -:-:---==:...:.::.:::~

Llmootone. houoo coal. Coli
lt4-367·7760

87

A '1(. '

',
,

'

A DEEP CREASE N
t

THE EAR LOBES COULD
INDICATE C~A~GE IN
CORONARV VE55EL5...
R • M Furniture Manufac'

Uphostered .

7 C
·
· rown
8t4-2&amp;e.
8t4·448·

1o

"• w

I I I I ]"

(Anawont tomorroW}
Yesterdoy'a l Jumbles: CREEL EXUDE MARKUP BURLAP

·BRIDGE

..

James Jacoby

,-------~ ;

A problem
with entries

.A

NORTH
KJ6
'Q iO 3
tJ643
.QJ

By James Jacoby

11·11·11

EAST
North, an old·fasbioned type who WEST
.Q
10 71
liked to bid his strongest four-card suit : 9 8 2
'9 76 St 2
fust, opened the bidding with one · t : 2K J 8
t98
spade and then bid no-trump at the · • 10 1 3
two-level and three-level. When South
~
SOUTH
bid four diamonds, conflnning a six• ~3
card club suit and a five-card diamond
...
suit (with long suits of equal length, he
t A K Q 10 7
would have originally responded two
..
.K98762
diamonds), North realized that it
•
might be useful to let his partner know
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
that he had at least the ace of spades. :
~be bid of four spades said, " Partner, ·
Norlb Eaot
I ve got at least the ace of spades, but 1 . Wttt
don't have the ace · of hearts. I also
2 NT Pass
have a fit in one of your long suits." · Pass
3NT Pass
That was enough encouragement for Pass
u
Pass
South. He jumped to six clubs, which ~::
6+
Pass
North immediately corrected to six Pass
diamonds.
Declarer ruffed the opening lead of ,
Opening lead: • K
the king of b•arts, played two rounds
of diamonds and led a club. East won ' - - - - -- - -- - - _ ) •
the ace and played another heart,
•
trumped by declarer. South now fool ·
'
lshly led a club from his hand to dummy's honor. When East showed out, all
be could do was trump 1be last heart, from his hand, declarer should croes to ·
throw a spade from dummy on the dummy with a spade and then play a ·
club king and then take a spade fi- club. When East discards, the club nesse. When that lost, he was one honor can be overtaken and the nine •
down .
played through West. The rulflng fi· .
Rather. than plav the second club neae now ll)akeo the slam.
'":

.A

'

I.

p.,,

.

~~by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
2 Muslim
I Aida's TV
title
hit
3Title
5 "B..elle
in India
Railey"
4 No easy
character
customer (sl.)
10 Indian
5 Mercury
city
Is one
II Drool
6 Prank
12 Duo
7 Ex Mrs.
Sinatra
terdly'o Anowor I "
13 Flaunt
14 Tipsy
8 Knight
19 Seedling 32 She ltered
16 Ne w
o r comedy 20 So. Am.
bay
Orleans
9 Pay dirt
wildcat
33 Surprise!
street
II Urge on
21 Roma n
34 Fe ncing
18 Jungle
15 Inlet (Sp.J
sUltesman
dummy
beast
t6 TV's
23 Estrange 35 Actor
• 21 Crete's
Lettennan 27 Steno 's aid
Hingle
capi ta l
l7 Related
28 Health
37 Concealed
22 Coincide
maternally
resort
38 Bullring cry
24 Grand18Foreign
31 EquiUlhle 39 Craving
parental
25 Arlanias
26 Larry
Holmes
lost It
281talian
city
29 Poem
30 Be pen itent
32 County
In Ulster
33 JuxUlpose
36 Nautical
greeting
40 "-'s Gate"
( W8i film)
41 Tessera
42 Change
43 Actress
Rarhara

v..

DOWN
I Chart
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES - Here's how 1o work il :

1

AXYDLBAAXR
!&amp;LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is usfd
for the three L 's, X for the two O's, elc. Single leite rs,
a postrophes, the length and formation of the wor ds a r e all
hints. Each day the code letters a re different.
•
CRYPTOQUOTE

Sudan to tho Nilo Delta .
(60 min.)
® Charill &amp; Compony
(CC)
crJ) Mr. Provln Carnll to

W O M U K EU

Andre Previn

K DR

DZ

.V U M R;

P W E WK R

ia-

Ebenezer Scrooge rectivll

.,

•.

Anawer. A bird ne shbuld have thought ol before he
was knocked out - DUCK

12-11

en unexpoctod vlolt from
Moriay'o ghoot.
10:00 D CI)C!J it. Elllwhlr~Fi o­
cuo folio In iovo, and a .
power blackout otrondo
Weatpholl In an olevotor
with on angry young mon .
(60 min.)
()) Ill lUI Arthur Holloy'o
Hotel (CCI A woman loorno
a oecrot about her llonc11,
I I

••
Now arrange !he circled letters to
form the surprise answer, 11 1uggesied by lho obove cartoon.

Prfntanswerhal8: " (

ill Brian Thompson jour·
nays from the south of the

Town

I

turing. St Rt
Ch
·
·
y, Oh. Call
1470, coli Eva .
3438 . Old

MAKE~!!

•'

Kryotle

oumes the lsaderahip of
tho Loo Angeloo Phllhar· ,
monic. (60 min.) ·
[HBOI MOVIE: 'lrroconcllo·
blo Differoncoo' (CC)
8:30 liD G101111 Burna Comedy
W11k A year olter chong·
ing his okinfllnt woyo,

Uphola1ery

1978 Y·B Converolon Luv
truck, roll bor, Bloror
Whoolo. vory nice . 1B79 4
door Chlvotto. Coli 304·
175·3388.

2 Reg. Anguo bullo, ortlfl·
dol, porformonco tooted. I 1-::-:-:-:-::::-- - - - moo. old, 80 oonto 1 pound, 1981 VW dlooal Rabbitt LX
roal nlco . Coli 304·1171- pickup. oir oond .. -eo. 50
2902 oftor I .
,MPG. 111c. cond. U ,900.
Colt 304-878-1288 or 304Pigo. Coli 304-878-2743 .
523 ·8843 .
·

150Y,WHA1'A

:

..

II·JI

I I rJ

su lts of Rite's phyolcal
exam. (60 min.}
(I) ()) Holiday Shopping
Guido
Cll River Journoyo: Tho
Nllo with Brion Thompoon
(CC) Pleywri.JI.hl and novel-

81,:; .

Liveatock

and

t

II

ICORNBOI

basks under Joel's gaze
wh ile Blake awaits the re-

--------------: ,;

reliable tervlca. Call 61 4 .

INITMAR

exit hopes for a levish reward when the eccomodates King Galan in her

870 GT dryer 1100 bu. ••c.
James Boys Water ServiQJ
cond . t4,200. 18 HP Doull 1873 Chevy truclc. 6 cyl .. Aioo poolo lillod. Call
troctar 4WD 110,600. 100 good motor, body rough . 268·1t41 or 814 · 448 · ·-··
HP Daull 4WO 113,000.
11711 or 814·448-7911
·
Morgon'o Woodlawn Form, 82,000 mlleo. t850. 81 4· :::::--:::-:-~..:.:..:..::·~
912·3840.
304·11tl·t288 or 304·123·
K.en•a Water Service. Wella1 •
1843.
t978 V. ton Ford Cuotom C11tern1. pools fill ad. PhoRe: ,. ":
pick-up. EC . Po. pb, auto. 814-387·0623 or 6t4-3811- · ~
Moooay Forguoon 255 dleool Aloo 20 cu . ft. lr11zer. Now 7741 night or day.
. •: -;;:
trocotr, tll,9111 . Sldoro oandltlon. Moytog wringer
Equipment, 304-171· 7421 . type woohor. 814· 843· Waugh '.• Weter Service~: b
W~lll, c•atern1, pools. ful. .. ~
11334.

63

Tyler Moo18, tu"!ing
on thot omllo 1geinl

IJ ()) @

Fottv Troa Trimming, otump
romovol. Coli 304-875·
1331 .

82

by a family run-

CIJ Ill il}l Tho lnoidor• (CCI

RON'S Ttlevlolon Sorvlce.

tl(') I I I

Michael

nmg a tourist camp. (80
min.)
· (]) , Chompionohlp Roller

Colllt4-288· 6522.

1977 Chevy nova. 6 cyl..
1550. 1114-992·3840 .

w1th

C!J G ()) Wh11l of Fonuno
Cll SCTV l\lotwork
® Eyowltnooo Nawo
(!]) MacNtii·Lihrwr l\lewahour
Ill il}l Divorce Coun
fJl Jefferaona
CIJ Mary Tyler Moorw
IJCI)AIINowllt'oMakee
Dtal
Cil PIHoo Don't Eat Daloloo
(]) NBA Today
()) Now Newlywed Game
C!J IJ Cll Jeopordy
ill Nightly Buoinou Ropon
liD Wh11l of Fonuna
Ill il}l Prlco lo Right
fJl WKRP In Cincinnati
[MAXI HHdroom
I]) Sonlord end Son
IJ CII C!J Highway to
Hoeven (CC) Port 2 of 2
Scotty focao outoide prejudice when ha defends a
disfigured ertilt on an 11•
sault charge. (80 min.)
Cil Bulttrlly lolond Port 4
of 4 Separated from hie
parents during 1 booting
accident on tho Melayoian
COlli, I 14-yur-old VIet·
nemoao refugee lo offered
e~sistance

·-

new tires .

1984 Mercury Topoz bee~

puppleo, -••tile hunting
dogo, uc. poto &amp; fomlly
protection, Chomplon oiro
from top winning otock with
hunting bockground . Coli
814-388-8720.

ServicHs

t982 Dodge Arioo, 2 dr.,
33,000 mlloo, ••· oond. Coli
s 1 4·448-0254.

135 Mooooy Forguoon trac·

with

John boot for oalo. CeU
814·256 · 6417.
•
•

Pump

BuMdlng aupplloo, (300} 4x4
inch 12to18ft.oaktlmbero.
Margon'o Woodlown Form,
304·875·12B8 or 304·123·
11843 ovonlngo.

tlonal

lnterv~ew
Oou~os.

tared In Ohio. All work
guarontood. Coil 304-273· ·
28tt . Revonowood. W. Vo.

188&amp; MF 240 dloool live
po-. opln outo, 73 houra .
Coll8t4·379·2112.

m11onry auppllet. Mounteln

Pets for Sale

Boats and
Motors for Sale

t984 Honda LX outo.,
38.000 mlllo, 19,200. Cell
814·448-8239.

Stoll Block, Rt . 33 Now
Hoivon. w. Vo. 304·882·
2222 .
.

68

.76

·I

a

2· 1983 XR 100 Honda din ,.
6 4
blkoo, ••c. cond . Coli t .
446-8247.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ __,.
t986 Sproa Honda Scooter".
50 CdC, red w~h helmet. o•o.
con ,town or school, 1350 .
Coll304-875·2942 .
•• • •

crete . Cali 304-773 -5131. : :,;
1977 CJ·&amp; Jeop. Coli days
814-448-1711 aftor 4 :30,
1114· 245· 5881 .
.

79 Cadillac Fleetwood
B111ughom t • - · good
cond. block brown motollc
whh loother interior. Soo ot
32 Worwlck Rd.. price
u.5oo. Coli 304· 875·
2864 eftor 7PM.

Block, brick. monar and

t

Motorcycles

su,.r groin ted beef . ., .20

14'8" long 311.00 ...
5. 12 poe. IIIII lnouloted
prlhung door'o, 8 panel, 8
,.nol or fluoh 2·8 or 3·0, Jlvldano Form Equipment.
78 .00 eo. Slngloo 89.96 • · Yoar End Solowhh I porcont .
I . Durhom ook mooonlto lntereat . Long Tractort
,.noung 4 'xB'x\4' &amp;.99 or Groin Barno. llo fuH llno of
Woodliold chootnut B. Agr. Equip . Complotellno of
Vormoor Hoy Equip.. Round
grade.
7. 4'•8'x'~" pr.tlnlohodnio· Bolo foodoro, 178. 00,
aonite pentllng aecondt Grinder mlxoro, 3 pt. hhch
roto,Y tNioro, t1 ft . food
3.91 on up.
·
bunko t110 .. poll Driver
~. Bruohed olumlnum koy
tntronco locka 4.89 • · 1780, 8 HP Woodoplltt""'
9 . lntorlor prehung door' o UIO.. Chock our prlceo on
aMOrted size's .,. flnltMt gate1 a Correl panala,
211.98 .
pickup rocko, - -· min·
10. 48" ook vanity w~h B orol loodoro, whool horoo
grodo morblo top 1 9B.OO. lawn Mowera, wood
Penn'• Werehouu, Well·

63

.... onllrtlfY-

0:00 • (2) CIJ II) Q Clllll II}}
Now1
·
CI&gt; ltOO,OOO l\lamo That
Tuna
(]) Mazda Sponolook
Cll3-2·1, Conllot (CC)
liD Eyowltntll Nowo
(!]) Eloctrla Com,.ny
18 Dlff'r~nt Strokot
[HBOJ MOVIe: 'Mom, tho
Wolfman, '"d Me'
6:06 CIJ And.!. Griffith
8:30 IJ (2) CD NBC 111-o
(I)GrHn AcNo
(]) Aaroblca: Bodlea In Motion
()) Ill (IJi ABC Ntwo
Cll liD CBS Nowo
Cll Doctor Who
(j]) Body Electric
fill T..l
8:311 CIJ Coral Burnett
7:00 II (2) PM Magazlni
Cil Courtlhlp of Eddlo'o
Father
(]) SportiContor
()) E~terteln~nt Tonight

73,000 mllao. $3500. 614· :
742·2700dayoor 8t4-387· •
0857 oveo.
• "

~~==;?;~~~~~!";;:==~====~

Unooromt&gt;io lhooolourJumbleo
leiter to liCit oquare, to romi

one,

EVENING

stereo cast., air, 1 owner . ~ •

74

ftlJ!JjMt f!lft ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~· by Henri Arnold lnd Bot&gt; Loo

, . . 1;l/.UJY

1980 Joop Charokoa . 2
door, 8 cyl .. 4 op .. om·fm

tion .. Coli 304-468· 1643. • '

Surplut Nlvlge CkJMOUtt.

1. 8"x7 - tl"x11 ~ prima
hordboord oldlng 20 .00
pr.oq or 1.71 pr. ploc1.
2. Embooaod wood gralrl
oluminum lkli"tt with foam
beak in color 39.95 oq.
3. 4fx8' on 4 'x9'•7-11
otucco to . Mooonito oiding
8 .95 on t3.9tl pc.
4. Y.t" end %" exterior

4 W.O.

-t975-------.·· .
CJ&amp; Jaop, good cond~ ·. ,;

BUILDERS SUPPLIES

1-:---------

2 bedroom homo. Burdolto
ot..,.t., lanced yard, depoo~
;~'l,~~od . Coli 304 ' 678 ·

/

'

oigno 127911 Uuhted, nonAmono 18 cu.ft. froot fr11 orrow 1259 . Unlighted 1
rolrlgorotor, 30" Amono 1208. (F"'" lattoroll S11 66
Petl for Sale
electric Mtl alelnlng rongo locolly. (800} 423·0163.
horvoot gold, 8350 ooch. onytlmo. ·(800} 828·2828,
Still under warrontv 304· ext . 1104.
578·2089 .
- - - - - - - - - Chrillmoo Spocloll Beautiful
1 - - - - -- - - - t5 .8 ft . cheot frooler, liko AKCGormonShophordpup·

On Nonh Founh Middle·
port. 2 bdr, furniohod opt..
Coil 304·882·25&amp;6.

Vans&amp;

The

•

SLAUGHTER!!

'

Afahen's for sale. SH 11
20Zl Jefforoon Avo., Pt .
Pleooant.

L...---------,r----------l

dtrplnnlng. netdo llnioh
work . Reduced to 17•800 ·
Call8t4-441-3040.
bdr..
•
Floatwood.
14
1'1&gt;70
botht. Loto of 3••troo.

a. bath . Partly furniahld,
with w11her &amp; dryer in
Roclne . Cali 6t4 - 949 ·
27t9 .

...._

.....--

"I'm makm'g .bre~cuua8
I~ t - d0
YOU Wat\t butter On your
PO.pcorn?"

t4x70 Groywood 3bdr., 1 'II
both, nowly remodolod. un·

41

73

Lldleo dlomond olullor rlrlg.
1111 7, fo!() .OO. Coli 3046711-5728 .

Country otylo ook furnitu.., ,
hond crofted ond finiohed ,
entlquo "'productlono. Paul
Conkel. Rt.7, Tupparo
Plein1.

Ohio

Television
Viewing

t650 . Call304-458· 1987.

/

985
I WQ.J'T BE A F1&gt;RrY
10 WHOLESALE

PB. long wide bed, price ;

1---------

12x86 1971 SchuHz. ucol·
lent condition, new c.rpet, 2

36

Big pootor bunk bedo, com·
ploto 1200.. motchlng dook
178.. woll huflrlor NCIInor,
1'1!11. t71 .. Comnnodoro 14
with dlok drivo 14110., 1883
Hondo XR· t 00, tloo. 1t81
Honda Odooaay aeoo. Coli
304·171·1758 oftor 7 .

"""" dryor e.......to - n
tSII, Iklo by lldortfrlgororor
copportono llko now 12211. 10 lpood mon bloyolo.
rwlrleorotar whlto *911. ro· •too.. 3 ap~~d womon
frleerotor wMo froll !roo blcyalo t75 .. both 21 ...
11110. rw~rotor cop,.r· olmoot now. Coli 304-891·
ton. troll lrM 1126, refrig· 3328.
orotor whhe 1911, wood &amp;
cool bumlrlg ot... t1 76, 30 King olio wotor bed &amp; fro,..,
ln. goo rwng1 Htl. Slloggo olmoot now wHIIIt ony king
Applloncoo. Upper Rlvor ol1o h..dboord, liH rogu..r
Rd .• GoHipollo, 814·446· · klrlg olze 1h11to. Coli 3047398.
882.3208
.

12x85 1871 3 bdr. Brook·
wood. new carpet good
cond. 1'h batha. g11 heat.
111,900. Coli 114· 448 ·
Ot75 .

2 bedroom mobile homo;
otonn windowo &amp; ocrHno.
oil furnoco, undorpinning,
good cond. Call 814-2116·
8074.

Ht

12110. Spud Quoon
weohor-dryer oor 1210.
hoovy duty Frlgodolro
wo~ 1121, G.E. woohlr
IVocMo gNon t 1 110, Ken·

1982 Clayton, 14X85. fully
fum ., Wlllher, dryer, AC.
underpinning &amp; porch . Exc.
cond .. Moke on Offer. Call
6t4· 258-1821 or8t4-258·
8315 .

December 11

Truck• for Sale •

1972 GMC truck Y· B, PS ,

ILJI

1973 Boron Crown oxcol·
lent condition • .wnlng, un·
dorplnnlng, woohor· dryor,
nlco lot-town. Coli 8t4·
446 · 6577 o r 614· 4411·
29011 .

33

Wednesday, December 11. 1985

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

CM

DEELIWR C DI&lt;

w
w

T C KY
T C KY

CM

B L C R IJ

YC M ·

' R VU MM 'Y . - J C IJII C W T
!: IJ .II UV
• Y.. terdoy's C I')'J&gt;toquote: SOME. t"'R Rf:NOWN, ON
SC\W'5 OF LEARNING DOTE, AND THINK Til EY
GROW IMMORTAL AS Til EY QUOTE - EDWARD
YOUNG
a young man claim s to be
the oon of Mro. Cobot'olote
huobond and Dovo lnadvor·
ttntly helps tho hotel in 1
llnoncial monor. (80 min.)
CIJ ®The Equoll11r
(() Konowhl County on tho
Uno
liD Nowowotoh
fJI Ockl Couple
IMAXJ MOVIE: 'The Wild
Ult' ICC)

e

10:05 I]) World of Audubon
10:30 (I) Fltnooo Mogorlno
(j]) Aounlon
tt :00 • (2) Cll
111
(j}) Nowo
(I) Man from U.N.C.LE
(() Europoon Journal
(j]) Arotic Window Tho co·
lony ol Nonh Atlontic Puf·
t ina eotoblia had ot ChiC I·

mo m m

go's Lincoln Park Zoo is

exemlnad. (60 min.)

�.
:~,. ~-14-The Daily Sentinel
~.

Pomeroy-Middleport' Ohio

Wednesday, December 11, 198!$
;

Village mayors finish court cases
Three defendants charged with
driving while Intoxicated and drlv·
lnga weavlngcoursetorfetted bonds
In the court of Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday nlght.
AU lolfeltlng $450 lor the DWI
charge and $00 on the weaving
course charge were DouglAs Bell,
Racine, 1lmothy W. Neat, W~
~olunibll!; and Dorothy Ohlinger,
Pomeroy.
' Thomas Shuford, Middleport,
. was lined $00 and costs on a charge
at disorderly manner In the court.

.'

charges In the court of. Pomeroy
MayO!' Richard Seyler Tuesday
nlgllt.
f'lned on the charge were Michael
Whitley, Huntington. $43 and costs,
Drealllo!l Pickens, Route 4, ~e­
roy. $46 and costs; Helen Buckland,
Pomeroy, $43 and costs, and John
ThabeU, Mason, W. Va. $43 and
costs.
Forfeiting bonds on the charge
were Woodrow Queen, Shade, $43;
Randy Lee, Pomeroy, $43; Keith
Tanthorey, Coolville, $44; · Karen
Clark, Langsvllle, $44; Henry Ohlin·
ger, Mason, w. Va. $44; Regan
Arnold, Alba!Jy, $43; Rex narst,

Twelw people were either fined
or forfeited bonds on speeding

•

'

.
,-•

..•

·.
•
-·
;,

WINNERS - Representatives from buslnessei and groups having
:: wlllala&amp; entries In the annual Pomeroy Area Chamber of CGmmerce

EMternBand .

~ Meigs •••.
•

••
(Continued from page 1)
:.people, they outscored the smaller
-locations.
:· Kau!fman told Powell the coun··ty•s proposal was In correct form
::andcould be resubmitted when next
~ year's travel and tourism funding
: becomes avallable.
: Powell, :VII&gt; says the rejection
. Ju51 "slows down plans for promo!: lng tourism In Meigs Comly," will
:be receiving a more detailed report
•ttQDOD'sdeclslon.

..

:Gallco••.
•

Today... raln likely. High 55 to~Southeast winds 5 to 15 mph.
Tonight... rain likely with a low In
the mid 40s, Wind becoming north 5
to 10 mph.
Thursday ... tumlng colder with
slowly
rain likely.
falling
Temperatures
to around 40.steady or
Extended forecast
A

m:"'o~~= and

Frklaymomlng.• Iotoi5Satunlay..
(Continued from page 1)
: responsible for the remainder. Riffe and5~USunday.
said the GalUa County board could r - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
oot raise the money and submitted a
revamped application.
.
The Gallco Sheltered Workshop Is
currently housed In the gymnasium
of the Guiding Hand School and
houses approximately 31 cUents.
The new project calls for working
• space tor 71 cUents, while the
original facUlty had called lor room
• to.r 119 clients.

.

RIVERBOAT INN

PHOTO EXPRESS
271 lll•rth ......

Mldtllepllrt

..

ROll ~-· COLOR
TELEVISION
-~
lt· fii~IM
C:~llllltlocll

1(1 19" diagonal

04tlllll lltMo..
C111tro1
0.1CIIIt-ta""

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rar ..,....fl&lt;iu

RDII

( ~., .... IU.II
~1111...1 UG

lrlliant color p1rfomance wltft tiM follow!.. dllu•• fiGtwlt:
•Automatic color control and fleshtone correction.
•Automatic contrast/color tracking.
•Super AccuFilter black matrix picture tube.
•Umlized Xtendedlife chassis.
•Automatic Fine Tuning (AFTI.
•Contemporary-styled durable plastic
cabmet with walnut finish.

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$29900

25"
REMOTE
CONSOLE
NOW
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in billions of dollars
150

100
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lCA 19" ••JOIIII XL-100
loommat'l C•lor TV with
C~•Loclc Digital ••••• Ct~ttrol

Bnlliar!t color performance featuring
the ch~rside convenience of remote
control and multi-band cable.tuning,

$41 900

lfG. 5489.00

ICA 20' diagonal ""'::::::;~
ColorTrak TV · In

•New square corner pic·
lure tube
•Channelock digital key·
board control
•Multi· band quartz crystal
tuning•
•Super AccuFilter too•
OOTY picture tube.

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S4f}9 RIUI

IIG. S4J9.00

$43,900

RCA 19" diagonal XL-100
loommat•" Color TV with
Olamel.ock Digital Keyboa1 d Control

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HG. f319.00

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RCA 13"

11-IIII!CIIon
Clllllntloc~

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lonnrdr...,w

$339°0

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I

SHOP SUNDAY
12-5

-~--------------------·

'

25
0

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

UPI Graphic
SURVIVES CHALlENGE - The "Granun-Rudman" plan to
balance the budget hy 1991 survived a chaDenge In the Senate over
mllllaryspendlngcutsWednesdayandwasappmvedbyotil!rlheHouse
and Senate. The biD oow awaits Preskklnt Reqan's !Jipature. UPI.

100 TO GO ~ Red, pink and wldte poln.seUias were
lagged and delivered lo patients II Pomeroy Health
Care Cenler, Arcadia, the Melp Counly Jnlnnary,
JUven-~ Nursing Hoine, and sick and sbutln
veterans and their families Wednesday. Posing wllh
the !Iowen II the haD jule before IIIey were loade4l for

delivery were from the left, Kalooryn Metzger,
chaplain, andBecl&lt;y Tyree, president of theAuxUiary,

and Jolu1 Mdler, paliC commander, and Fred Gibbs,
second vice president, Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion.

muke."

f'Ou\

,_..,

"''lle oo• ·lo;r_,

'

I

Middleport, Ohio

$659

RCA 25'' 'd iopal XJ,•I 00 Color lY with
Channtltic• Dltltal · • .,..,, Control

DECEMBER 19-7-8:30
DECEMBER 22-2-3:30 I

·

$175

chamber, voted against the blll,
which would require about $11.7
btl lion In spending cuts this spring.
Only 118 House Democrats joined
153 Republicans In favor at the blll,
whtle 130 Democrats and 24 GOP
members voted against it. The
measure was opposed by strong
liberals and staunch conservatives.
Housepassagecamelessthantwo
hours alter the Senate passed the
blll, 61.J1, with favm'able votes from
39 Republicans and 22 Democrats.
Twenty-two Senate Democrats and
nine Republicans opposed the bill.
Congress gave Reagan authority
Wednesday to sign a rough draft of
the balanced budget blll that would
be good enough untO a final copy at
the blll could be processed ·and
dellvered to the White House,
spokesman Larry Speakes said .
Despite the heavy favorable vote,
senators warned the tough budgetcutting choices would come later
this year and In the next live years
and raised the specter of tax
mcreases.
.
In the House, the measure drew
both fire and support from llberals
and conservatives.
Assistant House Republican
leader Trent Lott ri Mlsslsstppl said
the procedure would "hurt us all .
But I think at this juncture we have
m choice but to wte lor it."
"Wltlllut this blll, we wUI delay
(budget cuts) ,again and again,"
said Rep. Leon Panetta, D·Callf.
"Regardless of how you vote, this
lssuewUI not go away."
But Rep. David Obey, 0 -Wts.,
charged the spending cuts the btll
requires wUI lead the country Into
recession and therefore wUI never
be achieved. Arecession negates the
legislation as does a declaration of
war.
"The trouble with (the bill) Is that
It Is a lie," he said.
And Rep. Henry Hyde, R·IU., said
the strict budget-cutting formula
laid out by the bill "assigns to a
mindless, unfeeling unthinldng
bloodless formula the sensitive hard
judgments that we were elected to

Frustrated senators demand
action on acid rain problem

..

FRUTH PHARMA(Y II

fiscal year '86 budget implemented)
.&amp; Deficit allowed by bill

LOCA1U • VWGI PIUMACY

A81FT FOR THE ENTIR-EFAMILY!

Wednesday, December 11, 7 P.M.-8:30 P.M. 1
I

e Projected deficit (assuming.

125

.

Willi-"""

1
a

The Proposed "Gramm·
Rudman~' Balanced
Budget Legislation.

50

.... lift..... lid
.!W dn
'iw iCIIUfwl'dlllll-~.

~ r::::::~~~~ ~~E~f~:Fo~· ALL c:HILDREN: ::::J

under a Wednesday midnight dtlad·
line crunch since It was attached to a
bill to lift thefederaldebtceUingto$2
trillion. But the Treasury Department said just before midnight
Wednesday that a signature by the
president today would come In time.
The House gave final congressional approval to the massive
legislation, which will force drastic
budget cuts In nearly all areas of
government and could lead to tax
hikes, by a vote of 271-154 late
Wednesday. But a majority of
Democrats, who control the

'

992·6669

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

BRING YOUR
1
:.1 CAMERA &amp;
I
=I TAKE YOUR
I
·~
OWN PICTURE OR. FOR s1so I
:: WE WILL TAKE ONE WITH SANTA I

'

Valid onlv,ld.

located on Cherry Ridge. Turn East at ~rwin onto Rt. 611,
go 4 ll!i. to Milepost 13. Turn South on gravel road, 1'12 mile
to aro,vt.

\ur~ ·rttf·l*i tlrulrr

J

.'

money, too.~ fllm size you lhoot-dlac,
110, 126 or 135-brlng It In today lor the
luteS~ beatnt prints In town .

FlESH CUT TilES AVAILABlE
01 CUT YOUI OWN

,Meigs jobs among
new ODOT pJ'(]•iectsl

716 N. 2nd ·

'- 1110 the beat! And
It'a right hlrt on our
Pf'lll"-· That'&amp; how we
ofl8r you lf*dy 1.f!Our
dro eloping and printing of your
film, And how we maintain the llglllesl quality
control In the bullneaa. Your film alwlya co~
bltck becau• .. : It nevtr lelvn; and we aave you

en tine

features drastic cuts

The legislation, which calls for the
deficit to betaken down lnstepsover
the next fiveyears, was thought to be

AT THE

.

4••·--------------------·
~
~
I
J-1 Hey l&lt;ids! . . .....~:.... ·~.,'..1')1

_at y

Story on Pllg1!12

2 SectkJns 16 Pages 26 Centl
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

today.

1 nr;.IGHT ONLY

\l_""" ..

. Contracts totaling $16,871,864.40
'on 24 highway Improvement pro- jectshavebeenawardedbytheOhlo
:; Department d. Transportation.
:
Of that amount, $552,127.70 will be
- used lor work on resurfacing 12.3
: •mUesofStateRoute143!romCounty
~ Road 10 to the Athens County llne;
:: StateRoute68lfr001StateRoute7to
: . State Route 124, and various
.;; sections or the Meigs County ODOT
::: Garage. The contract has been
;:- awarded to the Shelly Co.. Inc. of
• Thornville, and the scheduled
-;; completion date Is July 31.

•

e
WASHINGTON (UPI) - With
approval of legislation to balance
the federal budget by 1991, Congress
set the country on a path toward
declining deficits and set ltselfu pfor
a donnybrook - beginning this
spring- over spending cuts.
The House and Senate both
approved the leglsalatlon Wednesday and sent It to President Reagan,
who Immediately pledged to sign It

SATURDAY, DEC, 14

· Veterans Memorial

DECEMBER 14-7-8:30
DECEMBER 16-7-8:30

:

BlltZKREIG

BRADFORD'S

:_~Los:::·to:!/!::

' .'

ROCK WITH

STMAS

chance
of SIHlW211 Ounies
In ••lhe
nonheast.IUa;hs
to 35 Frlday
ln

Admissions--Melissa German,
Middleport; Grace Price, Long
Bott001; Pearl Hoffman, Middle·
• port; Roland Wise, Middleport.
Discharges--Ronald Riffle,
Claude Eblin, lola Collins.

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

1:~1~636~.;;;;~;;!;~;;,~~;~~MID~D~U~POI~~T,;;OH;.;;;;~

Salunlll)'. Fair Sunday, excepl a

DAYS 'TIL CHRISTMAS

Balanced budget bjll

treasurer; andJackFollrod, trustee
for'threeyears.

r;:::;:;;;;;;;;;;;::::;;;;;;;:=:=:=:=;-j

CLEVELAND (UP!) _ Tuesday's winning Ohio Lottery
1111mbers: Dally Number
127.
Ticket sales totaled$1,199,829.50.
with a payoff due of $878,581.50.
PICK-4

Story, photo on Page 8

Officers were elected at last
nlght'smeetlngofthePomeroyFire

Daily IC)ltery winners

Weather forecast

GE-RCA merger

Hansel and Gretel

Vol.36, No. 167
Copy,ighted 1986

A, free cancer clinic for pap and
breast exams Is scheduled lOr
Monday, 1 to 5 p.m., at Dr. WUma
Mansfield's o!flce. Call 992.fili01 to
make an appointment. .

The WUllng Workers Class of
Enterprise United Methodist
Church wlll hold Its annual Christ·
mas party and gift exchange
Friday, 7::1l p.m., at the home of
Marjorie Bowen.

. &amp;nJUp; Mary K. Holter,represenilngChesterCwncO:fla, Daughters of
' · America; second row, Ito r, Shirley Quickel, director of The Dlince ·
; • Compiiii.Y; Annie Chapman, receiving for lhe Pomeroy Elementary
Schaol Cheerleaders; BW Haploostall, SeU'S store, best theme entry;
~: Ja.y IUD, J. AR.SportsShop, beslrornmerclalenlry; back, Ito r, Keith
~ KancJ.dk. Greta Rlllle, Don Harris, Russell KeUer, rreelvlng for the

·See report on Page 10

Officers chosen for ftre department

Free clinic slated ·

Plan annual party

!:' Chrllllmas Parade have been presented trophies. Plclured arefronl, Ito
' r, Ke113' Rizer, Tasha Jollnson, Kenda Rizer, Sugar 'n Spice marching

•
••

w.

Charles Legar continues as lire I
Department.
chlel
for the department having two
more years on his elected term.
Elected were Thomas Werry, first
asslslant chief; John Manley,
second asslslant chief; Jeff Shank,
flrstcaptaln; GarySnouf!er,second
captain; Danny Zirkle, first Ueuten·
ant; TerryGardne~.secQndlleuten·
ant; Jamie Ash, third lieutenant. ,
Offlcersolthedepartmentelected
were Danny Zirkle, president; Tom

'

Photo!;, l!l&amp;ory oo Page 3

Pomeroy, $48; Melanie Black,
Gallipolis, $47; and Cannan Fragale, Pinch,
Va. $51.
Howard English, Pomeroy, was
lined on four charges when he
appeared In the court He was fined
$63 and costs on a ch~ 'ol
disorderly llll!Jiner; $313 and 'costs,
resisting arrest; $213 and costs,
threats to a pollee officer; and$213
and costs, assaulton a pollceoflleer-&lt;
Forfeiting bonds were Eddie.
Smith, Syracuse:$63. onachargeol
taUure to have his vehicle under
control; and Sandra Stanley, Pooieroy, $375, drlvlngwhUe Intoxicated,
and$53, failure to stop at a stop Ugt.i.

Reed, vice president; Terry
Gardner, secretary; Paul Reed,

. Mine explosion

Redus, Hume traded

oChannet.ock digital remote contr~
oOn·streen lime and channel number diSplay

WASHINGI'ON i UP!) - Senators expressed frustration Wednes·
day with the pace of the admJnlstra·
tton' s 5-year-old acid rain research
program, saying It Is time lor action
to cut sulfur emissions believed to
cause the problem.
However, AdmlnlstratorLee'Fhomas of the Environmental Protec·
tton Agency told a Senate panel It
would be another twoorthreeyears
before he had enough scientific data
to recommend a solution to the acid
rain problem.
At the same time, though, Drew
Lewis, President Reagan 's special
acid rain envoy to Canada, said he
would give the White House
recommendations on acid rain by
the end of January.
Lewis declined to elaborate, but
members of a group called Alliance
lor Acid Rain Control said he had
Indicated In a private meeting that
his plan would do more than call lor
further study of the problem.
"I think Mr. Lewis, feels his
assignment Is to get SOOle tangible
result to sshow the Canadians," said
Wisconsin Gov. Anthony Earl, a
memberci'thegroup."He indicated

he felt his assignment was to come In
with some sort of program."
Envlro.nmentallsts charge sujfur
emissions, prlmarUy from coal·
burning power plants In the Mldw·
est, are blown over the Northeast
where they combine with cloud
moisture to form highly acidic rain
that kills forests and aquatic life In
lakes and streams.

years."
Thomas's response did notsttwell
with several senators, who noted
that several previous EPA administrators had told them the same thing
since Congress enacted the acid rain
research pr()gram In 198),
"Obviously, the administration
has taken a polltlcal position oo this
Issue," said Sen. George Mitchell,
D·Malne. "And the polltlcalposltton
They have pushed for congres· Is there wUI not be oontrols on acid
stonal action to require massive- rain.
and costly - reductions In sulfur
"I am not opposed to research on
emissions, but the administration acid rain," he added. "I am
and many Midwest congressmen disturbed that each (EPA) admlnls·
say there Is stUI no conclusive proof trator who testifies before this
that acid rain Is responsible lor committee takes refuge In the
"dead" lakes and stunted trees.
sanctuary of research."
And at a meeting of the Senate
~ded Sen. Frank Lautenberg,
Environment and Public Works D-N.J .: "The pace Is one that Is
C001mlttee, Thomas said there was terri lily, terriblY frustrating."
stUI too much uncertainty about tlle
And Sens. Max Baucus,'D·Mont ..
extent and effects of acid rain for and Gary Hart, D-Colo., noted that
him to make recommends tlons on whUe acid rain has long been a high
an emissions control program.
profile Issue In the East, It Is
"The answers are not as clear-(.'Ut becoming an Increasingly pressing
as ·many would have us believe," problem In the West.
Thomas said. "I can't tell you when
"If this govenunent waits until we
the answers are going to come to me. have perfect knowledge, we are
We wUI have a heck of a lot more never going to get anything done,"
lnftlimatlon over the next couple of Hart said.

REMEMBRANCES - Praty pinons, room
deodoriZers, and baskets of lnall lor nursing home
residents, the children's horl)e and the lnllnnary are

with, from the left, ,Jean Glbnore, Fred
Hanel, VlrgU Parsons, and Sue Utile.

shown

250 U.S. soldiers killed.in DC-8 ·jetliner crash
said In Hallfax, Nova Scotia. It said the plane rose a
short distance and then crashed, explodlngon Impact. ·
SearchandRescueCanadaconflrmedtherewereno
survivors aboard the stretch DC-8.
Ssarch and Rescue said It crashed over an
unpopulated area near the airport known as BW11er's
lUll.
Radio repol'ts said the flight from Cologne, West

(YITAWA (UPI) - A DC-8 jetliner carrying U.S.
mtlltary per9:lnnel home from the Middle East
crashed and exploded near Gander Airport In
Newfoundland today, killing all250 soldiers and eight
crew aboard, reports said.
·
The aircraft, operated by the Miami·based charter
company Arrow Air, landed at GamEr at 7:00a.m.
(5:50 a.m. EST) for refueling and took off again 15
minutes later, Search and Rescue Canada d.flclals

\

Germany, was carrying soldiers of the IOlst Airborne
Division, based at FortCampbell,Ky.,from dutytnthe
Sinal Peninsula to Fort Campbell.
The Pentaton confirmed the flight was beaded for
Fort Campbell, but refused to confirm that troops of
the 101st were aboard.
A spokl!sman at Bonn-Cologne airport In West
Germlli!Y said the plane had l3!'ded 'there oo Its way

from Cairo, Egypt, for refuelling early toda y. After a
stay of about one hour, In which the passengers never
left their seats, the plane took off at 3:52a.m. lor
Gander.
Gander Airport, located about 900 mUes northeast at
Montreal In Canada's most easterly province, Is a
major refueling point on t rans·At Iantic flights bet ween
the United States and Europe.

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