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Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Me~ County happenings..
IJnergencysquads Local game on sale
answer two calls
The Meigs County Jaycees are
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal Service reports two calls
Saturday and five calls Sunday.
Saturday at 10:09 p.m., Rutland
Fire Deparbnent to a chimney fire
at the Rathburn residence on
Leading Creek; Middleport Fire
Department at 10:15 p.m. was
called to assist Rutland.
Sunday atl: 57 a.m., Syracuse to
an auto accident on Rt. 124, no
transports; Racine at 9:49 a.m.
treated but did not transport Blythe
Theiss.

Meets Tuesday
Group II of the Middleport
Presbyterian Church will meet at
7: :JJ p:m. Tuesday at the home of
Dorothy Morris with Ethel Lowery
as ro-hostess. !..ennis Haptonstall
will conduct the study and there will
be gift exchange.

Film !!howing set
The 111m "Amish, Not To Be
Modern'' will be shown by the
Meigs County Library staff at the
Lutheran Church, Pomeroy, Dec.
19, 7 p.m. The film Is free and open
to the public.

Meel!! Tuesday
XI Gamma Mu Chapter of Ohio
Eta Phi Sorority wlll meet Tues·
day, 7::JJ p.m., at thehomeofAnnie
Chapman for the annual Christmas
dinner and glft exchange. Pack·
ages are to be wrapped In white
with red bOws.
Southern LoCal Board of Educa ·
tlon wUl meet In regular session at
the high school, Tuesday evening, 7
p.m., Instead of Monday.

Turkey shoot set
Racine Gun Club wm be slxlotlng
for turkeys at this Sunday's gun
shoot. The event wUI start all p.m.
at the clubhouse.

Fires...
(Continued from page 11

trees. Crumpled wrapping paper
lgnltes easily and causes fire ID
spread with amazing speed. ·
And don't bum the discarded gift
wrap In the fireplace or wood stove.
Such fires are more likely ID Ignite
cl'I.'OSOte which may have bullt·up
In the chimney.
And always be awareofoverload·
lng circuits. With all the extra
lighting used at Chrlstrnastlme, It Is
easy to overload circuits. When
fuses start ID blow, there may be a
fault In the cord, the w!rlng system,
or stmpty too many electrtcal
appliances, llxtures and Ughts
drawing on the power.
The temptation may be to put In
higher amp fuses, or If you don't
have fuses In the house, to put a
penny behind the one In place. so
that you can get on with your
activities. But don't....both practl·
ces are dangerous.
The correct amp fuse Is the only
one which wlll protoct your home
from an electrical fire caused by an
&lt;Nerload. The thlngtodo Is to locate
the trouble and correct It before
replacing fuses or resetting circuit
breakers.
Use a little caution In preparing
for the holidays and then let the
good times of the holiday season
roll.

Weather forecast
Today ... partly cloudy. High 35 to
40. Southwest winds 10 to l5 mph.
Tonlght.. .mostly cloudy ani
colder. Low arouoo 20. Northwr ,t
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Tuesday ... cloudy with a chance
of snow by afternoon. High arouod
:JJ.
Chance of snow Is 20 percent
today and tonight .. and 40 percent
Tuesday.
Extended lorecast
Wednesday lhroogh Friday
A chance of snow flurries in the
northeast Wecinesday.. otherwise
lair and cold Wednesday and
Thursday wlh highs In the teens
and lows 5 to 15. Not tlli cold Friday
with a chance of snow. Highs:llilo35
and lows 15 to 25.

Two lotto winners
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ohio
Lottery officials came up with two
matches In their search for winning
Lotto tickets sold for Saturday
night's drawing.
The winners will share a j!tfkpot
of at least $1.5 million, created·from
sales of $3,009,365 worth of tiCkets.
Numbers chosen were 2, 'S. 14, 22, 'l7
and 35.
Lottery officials said 4lll tickets
had five of the numbers and won
$646, whUe another 15,508 tickets
had four of the numbers for $46.
Wednesday's estimated jackpot
will be $1 mllllon.

again of1erlng the "monopoly like"
Pomeroy-Middleport Game for
sale at a cost of $11. The game can
be purchased at the following local
businesses, Hartley and Bennett
Shoes, Empire Furniture,
Vaughn's Cardinal, Fruth's Phar·
macy and Locker 219.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Samuel
WUliams, Shade; Albert Hemsley,
Syracuse.
Saturday Dlscharges .. Roland
Wise, Laura Fields, Mae Holter.
Sunday Admlssions..Rose Barn·
house, Middleport.
Sunday Discharges--Carolyn
Wllaley, Brett Price.

23 organizations share $300,000 grants
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Twenty·
three organizations In 18 Ohio cities
are sharing SllO.~ In travel grants
In state funds to create jobs and
promote local tourism programs.
The grant awards wm be admln·
lstered by the Department of
Development's Office ol Travel and
Tourism. The funds wtll assist local
non-profit visitor organizations to
market tourism attractions and
travel· related programs.
The 50-percent matching grants
area awarded on a one- time basis
within a three-year period.
"This Is the second year for our
travel grants program, designed to
stimulate Ohio's economy and

Pearl Nellie Hoffman

Pearl Nellie Hoffman, 84, Oliver
St., Middleport, died Sunday even·
ing at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Hoffman was born In Mason
County, W. Va., a daughter of the
Appeal filed
late Andrew and Carne Saxton
Puttney. She was a member ol the
A notice of appeal has been filed
Middleport First Baptist Church
In Meigs County Court of Appeals,
and was a retired restaurant
Fourth Appelate Dlsttict, In the
worker.
state's case against Joseph C.
Surviving are two sons and
Taylor.
d!\ughters-ln·Iaw,
PErry and Con·
Taylor was found guilty of
nle Hoffman, and Fred and Pauline
murder with a firearm specificaHoffman, all of Middleport; a
tion on Dec. 6 In Meigs County
daughter, Bertha Bing, Pomeroy; a
following a week long trtal by jury
daughter-In-law, Alyce Hottman,
on a charge of aggravated murder.
He was sentenced to 15 years to life Gallipolis; two sisters, Grace Thevenin of GaUipolls, and Evelyn
In the Chllllcothe Correctional
Henry, Galllpolls Ferry, W. Va.
Facility.
Also surviving are 20 grandchUd·
The appeal was filed by Attorney
ren, 33 great-grandchUdren and
Herman A. Caroon, Athens.
several nieces and nephews.
Preceding her In death besides
Will meet lonighl
her parents were her husband,
The regular December meeting WUllam Hoffman, a son, Wtlllam, a
ol the Meigs Local School District son-In· law, Vernon Bing, and three
Board of Education has been brothers.
changed from Tuesday evening 10
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
this evening at 7 p.m. at the central Wednesday at the Rawlings-Coats·
office buDding.
Blower Funeral Home wtth Rev.
Earl Eden ctflciatlng. Burtal wlll be
Wednesday meeting
in the Riverview Cemetery.

Middleport Literary Club wUI
meet Wednesday, 2 p.m., at the
home of Mrs. Bernard Fultz. Mrs.
Forrest Bachtel will present a
program of Chrlsbnas poetry. The
roll call will be Christmas verse.

promote local tourtsm efforts," said
Gov. Richard F. Celeste In an·
nounclng the awards. "The grants
glve organizations an added resource for promoting travel and
tourism In their communities and
create new jobs for Ohioans."
Grant applications were reviewed and recipients were recom·
mended by the Grants Comnnlttee
d. the Governor's Advisory Council
for Travel and Tourtsm. Applicants
had to show the crlterts d. a
projected Increase In tourtsm revenue; the posslblity of creating
jobs; the avatlabUlty ol local
matching funds; the historical,
ethnic, cultural and tourtsm value;

and projected economic Impact to
local Cllmmunlttes.
The largest grant - $34,000 Went to the Columbus Convention
Bureau. The Dayton-Montgomery
County Convention Bureau received $.li,OOO, while the Northwest
Ohio Tourtsm CouncU (Lucas
County ) received $24,000.
Also getting grants were:
Canton.Stark County Convention
and VIsitors Bureau ($18,000); Erie
County Conven tlon Bureau
($6,(00); Greene County Conven-

.

Pina Covert
Plna Covert, 61, Pomeroy, died
Sunday evening at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
She was born Feb. 5, 1924 In
Pomeroy, a daughter of the late
Charles and Jessie Stlllwagner,
Surviving area daughter, Sharon
Johnoon, near Long Bottom, and
three grandchUdren, Jessica, Ty
and Gary, Jr.
Besiles her parents, she was
pm.oecled In deatll by her husband,
Dana, a brother and a sister.
Services wm be held at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with burtaiiD he In the Wells
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home anytlme on Tuesday.

.IACI\soN Pllf · RT.35 WEST

--45201

ftOIJ

PEARL NELLIE
HOFFMAN
Calling Hours:
Tuea; 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
Services:
Wednesda : 1:00 P.M.

STOCKING
STOFFERS

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOl
JEAIBOOI STAFF

NOW ONLY
Model SJTIOO

GIFT CEniFICATES
Fern.
1986 .IGS HIGH
' YEARBOOK

$17700

RENTALS
WITH PURCHASE
SJS.OO VALUE)
(A

I

Po•roy, Ohio ·

Make Checks Pa~lt To
Meigs High SChool
Also a few 1915 Y~arbaolu
available for salt at 25.00

r;r

2 5 FREE MOVIE

Is SelMa

42091 ,_,.., , ••

Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry

I
&amp;

OPEN EVENINGS TILL I P.M.
Ohio

~~0'0$-Q.'O-aO'OsO ~'e.~

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

COAT SALE

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL AllERGIST

They'll stay warm all
winter with a heavy
winter coat or jacket
from Elberfelds.

CALL (614) 992-2104

67 ·1 ......

COLD BEER NOW ON SALE
.
LOWEST LEGAL PRICES
'

Many Brands On Sale This Month
2 liTER PEPSI
AND SPRITE

PRODUOS

99&lt;

EA.

•

O..n til 9:30 P.M. Man. thru Thw.; Fri. &amp; Sat. til 11 P.M.

C&amp;D PENNZOIL

5 Points Intersection

Ohio

We have an ex"llent
selection of ·styles for
men, women and
children.

ON SALE NOW!

REGISTER FOR A FREE 6 n. CHRISTMAS
STOCKING TO BE GIVEN AWAY DEC; 23rd.

SHOP EVENINGS TIL 8:00 P.M.

~

~

DAYS 'TIL CHRISTMAS

•

at y

•

enttne

Pome;oy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 17, 1985

1986

Story on P8Jn! 12

'

Elherfelds
POMIIOY

W.o-~~~~'O'a'O'OO ~~S•,t!

'•

'

1 Sectlo~ t"2 Pages 21i Centa
A Multimedia Inc . Newap•per

.

·President revives tax reform issue
aide said Monday night the speaker warned the
president, "You may need more than 50 on the bill."
Nonetheless, the ablllty of Reagan to come up with
the support was a positive end to what had started out
as a bad daY for the admin istration on tax retorm.
After meeting with Reagan, his top aides and Vice
President George Bush, most House Republicans,
including members of the GOP leadership, said tbey
still opposed the committee's nearly 1,400-page tax
measure because they thought It could prompt an
econoinlc disaster.
"From my point of view, unaltered and unmodified,
I cannot vote for:• the comnnlttee blll, said Michel.
As part of the deal that produced the GOP votes,
Republicans won an opportunity ID make some floor
adj~stments to their o'Wn tax revision blll - a

Treasury Secretary James Baker, emerging from
a meeting with House Republican leader Robert
Michel of Dllnols, announced that Reagan had
secured 50 Republican votes for the bill - the
minimum . number demanded by House Speaker
Thomas O'NeiU, D· Mass., before he would consider
bringing the blll to the floor a second time. ·
Following an exchange of telephone calls between
Reagan and O'NeUl, Democratic leaders accepted
the president's assurance of the votes and quickly
moved the bill through the Rules Committee, which
cleared It for floor action.
'However, because of possible Democratic defections, Reagan's guarantee of the Republican ·votes
does not mean the blll will clear the House. AnO'Nelll

sweeping alternative given virtually no chance of
passage In the Democrat· dominated House.
Also part of the deal was House consideration d a ·
non· binding resolution calllng lor the ~feettve dates
of the tax"changes to be delayed.
However, hoth of those conditions were not major
and Democrats had successfully avoided cpenlng up
the committee bill to amendments - a move they
said could begin to unravel the enure measure.
Even though the committee bUI differs In key
respects from Reagan's own plan, the president has
supported the measure so It can be sent to the Senate
next year and adjusted more to his liking. Reagan has
said a House defeat of the bill this year could klll tax
overhaul efforts for years to come.

Fathers
ordered
.
to court

!Meige board
;has carryover
Watch what you want, when you want- on your own
TV- with thll RCA VideoDisc Player. VideoDiscs offer
the best in movies, concerts, sports, children's shows,
plus much more. And the RCA VideoDisc Player brings
it all to life - right in your living room.
• Connects in minutes to your TV set.
• Special playback features : Visual Search for
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• P&lt;twer·assisled disc loading system wilh Auto Play.
• Elec tronic I unctio n controls for si mple, reliable
operation.
• Over 600 CEO VideoD isc titles availab le.

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL

Mafia·boss killed

, WASHINGTON (l)PI) - President Reagan's
, effort to rewrite the tax code, thought to be dead time
' and again, Is alive once more, rescued~ his personal
: lobbying rnlsslon that won enough House Republican
. : votes to prompt a new stab at a bill.
' Following a rare and successful presidential hip to
Capitol Hill Monday to round up GOP support, the
, House today planned for the socond time In a week to
, debate the massive tax overhaul measure drafted by
· the Democrat-led Ways and Means Committee.
: The bill, thought earlier In the day to be on Its
; deathbed, dramatically came to life Monday night,
rseveral hours after Reagan had spent abOut 50
· minutes talking t9 House Republicans, an· but 14 of
, whom Ignored him last Wednesday and voted to block
t the bill from being considered.

RCA VideoDisc Player

Pick Up At Meigs High Sdlool orund
a s.A. S.E. to:

Beat of Bend

'

S.ning the fa111ily af

Market report

SeePageS

'

INGELS FURNITURE

RAWUNGS-COA1S
BLOWEI
FUNERAL HOME

Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Donald Ray Folmer Jr., Zl,
and Carol Ann Richmond, 28, both
of Pomeroy.

Photos, siAlry on Page 3

Vol.36, No,170

1:00-5:30 P.M.

Ill~~~~~~~~
rp:;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;::;-j

A marriage license has been

Property transfers

See report .,_. Page 6

Copyrighted

SENIOR CITIZEN CENTER

Friends may call at the funeral

Seeks license

0100 vM.LEV LIVES'I'OCII
Sole Eveey Salunlay all p.m.
MM\et Repon December l, 191!5
'l'rends: V~:&gt;al Calves Steadv. Feeder Canle
Sleady Cows IIX&gt;:m high. ·Fl'&lt;'der S1eers:
Cool &amp; Cholre: 2!'.0-:Dl lbo. ,$55. -$59.~; lJO.«XJ
lbo, 153.~] .; 400-:iXllbo, 153.~.; ro8ll
lbo. ~1.-$5'7 . 50; ®100 lbo, $00.-$56.50; 1001111
lbi. $18.-153; IIX1 lbs &amp; over. lfi .ii0-$51.:
Feeder HeKl'l's: Good &amp; Choice: 250-:Dl lbs.
$45.·100.50; lJO.«XJ lbo, 144.-$52.; 400-:iXJ lbs,
144.50-$53.; ro8ll lbs, $43. $50; lll0-100 lbs.
$1l.ii0-Sol8.1li: "miiXl lbo, $«). -$47. ~: 1111 &amp;
over, 142.50-$50. Feeder Bul~ : Good &amp;
Choice: 250-:IXI lbs, 152.-$56.50; JI0.4XJ lbo,
$00.-$58: 400-500 lbs. 150.50-157.: 500-IIXJ lbs,
$48.-154.50; ®1\11 lbs. $47.·153..:1: 'ffi!I)J lbs,
$46.-$50; 1m lbs &amp; over, $4.1. 50-~. Hals Stet&gt;rs
&amp; Bulls: :IDliXllbs, m.-$42.50; Butcher Bulls
lll) lb.!! &amp; up UtlUilfS $41. ·S45.; CanOO"s &amp;
Cutters, S37.!X1-S4.1.: Butcher CoNs Utilities,
SJ3.U; Canners &amp; Cutten, $28.50-$3.1.; Low
grade it. Cows, SlO. Springer Cows, SZQ1.$375.;
Cow &amp; Calf comb., $}.1) .•$500.: Veal Calv('S,
Cho!ce &amp; Prime, $72.·$84.; ME'dlum Grade,
$58.·$'11\ Baby Calves by 1he ll?ad, s:aJ.•$«).;
Top Hogs ttiJ.2lO lbs, $45.50-$46. ~: Butcher
Boars 400 lbo &amp; up, $29.51J.$.I!.ID.; Butcher
Sows. lJO.«XJ ll&gt;s'. 134.·$38.50; 400-500 lbs.
$38.-$11.: !iliJ.fJXJ lbs, $39.50 $12.~: Pigs by 1he
head. $12.-$.11 .:

A GIFT FROM THE HEART
AT
RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 18

home at anyt!me. The family wtll
be present !rom 2to4 and7to9p.m.
Tuesday.

&amp;:!1

tion Bureau ($10,000); Marlon
Convention and VIsitors Burea.u
($3,000); Portsmouty Conventlol\
Bureau ($10,000) ; Tiffin Area Con·
ventlureau ($4,000).
Columbus Chamber of Com·
merce ($10,000) ; Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce ($6,000);
Geneva-on-the Lake Chamber of
COmmerce ($3,500) .
Cameo Concerts In Falrfield
County ($8,000) and Ohio Valley
Jazz Festival In Hamilton County.
($:¥),000). '
'

Dolphins prevail

GIVE BLOOD

Area deaths

Judgment !!ought
Grange Mutual Casualty Cos.,
Columbus, has filed suit in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
against Lester and VIola Shoemaker Excavating, Middleport,
requesting judgment of $4249.40.

Monday. December 16. 1985

.,I,
·'

'

Thirty-fathers, all with children
In
Meigs County, have been ordered
The Meigs Local School District session was set for 7 p.m. on Jan. 2
to
appear
Friday- five days before
: will have a carry-over of about and the schedule for regular
Chrlsbnas
- In Meigs County
: $lJO,OOO this year, Clerk-Treasurer meetings wil be arranged at that
Common Pleas Court to explain ID
· Jane Wagner reported when the time.
Judge Charles Knight Why they are
The board acceptf!d the resigna: district's Board of Education met In
In contempt of court after allegedly
tion of Teresa M. Drummer as a
: Middleport Monday night.
failure
to pay child support.
Mrs. Wagner brieRy ~lewed substitute secretary aide ef1ectlve
According
to the ludge, the cases
: this year's financial picture In Dec. 16 and employed Dorothy J.
are "major delinquencies" In the
: reporting the carry-over and lndi· Clatworthy as a regular cook for the
Meigs Count Bureau of Support.
: .cated she felt "comfortable" with rest of (he current school year.
All together, the lathers ·are
· the finances In the dlstrtct during Wanda Shuler and Kate Jarrell
behind
In chUd support payments
were named to the substitute
: the past year.
"In
excess
of $100,1ID" according to
The board authorized Wagner to teacher list for the rest d this scllool
Jean
VIneyard,
Bureau of Support
purchase additional Uablllty lnsu· year.
director.
A new, fund for the jUnior high
, ranee through Nationwide "Insu·
...-4 'IM group will likely be lnfol'llled
• ' ranee for all non-certltled and all school DH class was approved.
by till! judge that they are In danger
certl!lcated employes not &lt;;Lirrently Boatd member Bcb ~orr sug·
of
belng jaDed for being In Cllnternpt
covered, It was noted by Supt. Dan gested that fuoolng for vocational
ol
their child support orders, and
; Morrts that for the period, Dec.16 to Classes for the high school be
will
be advised of their legal lights
: Feb. 1, the expiration date of the increased next year. A social '
and obligations.
: current contract, the additional cost studies course !rom kindergarten
Ordered to appear Friday bclore
· will be$119. He further noted he has through grade 12 was approved on
the judge are Elbert L. Williams,
been advised that the dlstrtct can the recommendation of the
Rutland; Rnbert James Johnson,
rxpect a 25 percent Increase In superintendent.
Racine; George Michael Jenkins,
All board members, Richard
premiums on the next contract. The
Pomeroy; Tony M. Hutton, Coshoc•
., ,cost of liability coverage currently Vaughan, president, Larry Powell,
new, others refurbished, were glvet1 1o the Meigs ton; Richard Rathburn, Columbus;·
CIIRIS'IMAS IS FOR GIVING - The tradiilolllll
Barton, RDbert Snowden and ArCounty Jaycees lor distribution at Christmasllme.
; Is $4,050 ..
presentation of toys for the less fortunaletook place at
WOllam J . King, Pomeroy; WIWani
land King, along with Morrts,
Among the parish chUdren laking part In "a Jesson on B. Davidson, Pomeroy; Terry G.
Sacred Heari Church &amp;tnday. A procession of the
: The clerk-treasurer was autbo· James Carpenter, assistant super·
Chrl8tmas giving" were from the left, Steven Evans, Middleport; Dan[\y Carl
children bearing gifts was a feature olthe mombtg
:: rlzed to make necessary end of the lntendent, and Wagner were presMcCulough, Cecelia Mae GoeU, and wri and Andy Morrow, Galllpolls; Vernon Ml·
service with other membea:s olthe parish conlribut·
: year transfers. The (J"ganizatlonal ent for the final meeting of the year.
ing to the project. The severall(undred toys, many
Gry!ll.ka.
chael Otto, Su n Rise Beach, Tx.;
James Donald Rime, Syracuse;
David Stanley, Myrtle Beach, S.C.;
Jeffrey Earl Daniels, Canton;
Joseph M. Salyers, Louisa, Ky.;
James D. Council, Langsville;
Linden Scott Allman, Alba[\y;
David Lee Vance, Middleport;
Lincoln E. Smith, Middleport;
Carter Smith, Harker Heights, Tx.;
Paul L. Shain, Pomeroy; Thomas
Mohler, Patrtot; Jerry L. McDaniel, Rutland; Charles H. Klein Jr.,
Several Racine-Letart Falls area Roger Hill and Thomas C. Hill. . Pomeroy; Jerry L. Jacks, Langsfarmers have flied suits In Meigs $128,&amp;31.62.
ville; John William Hess Sr.,
County Common Pleas Court de·
Cases Involving othe r farmers Switzer, W.Va.; Terry D. Harmon,
mandlng judgments for damages to from the Racine-Letarl Falls area Englewood; James E. C!JJipman,
crops durtng the 1984 growing are to be filed In the near future.
Mlddlepor1 ; David Alan Bates,
season allegedly · caused by a
The farmers allege the~· crops Pomeroy; Ronald H. Bachtel,
growing medium known by the did not grow properly .duting the Pomeroy; Michael C. Dorst,
brand name Pro-Mix.
1984 season
due to harmful Pomeroy.
Defendants In the suit are chemical properties in the potung
Premiere Brands, Inc., New flo. soU. The farmers further allege that
chelle, N.Y., Burton Flower and production durtng the 1984 season
Garden, Inc., Burton, Ohio and was damaged greatly as a result d
Landmark Inc.: Columbus.
the faulty potting soU, therefore
Cases fi led solar are VIrgil !&gt;.and diminishing their Incomes for that
Kathryn HUI asking for judgment
year.
of $100,000; John Hill for $112,056;
A trial by a jury of eight has been
Marshall Roush, $63,825; Clifford demanded In the matter.
Hill, $102,158; Charles and Lois
In anotber court action, RDsa
Wolfe, $12,822.50; David Aaron Marie Talbott, Marietta, the exWolfe, $44,Z75; Eugene E. Davis wife ct Terry D. Talbott, deceased,
and Steve Sheridan, $.}),325; Larry has filed suit In Meigs County
Afamily of three are homeless as
E. and Nancy Cummins, $122,855;
Common Pleas Court requesUng the result of tire at 101, Union
$99,006.95 from Mary Jane Talbott, Terrace, Pomeroy.
admlnlstratrtx of the estate of the
The two-story frame home' was
deceased .
occupied by Mr. and Mrs. J. w. ·
Judgment Is requested for an Perkins and daughter.
amount allegedly due andowtngfor
According to Charles Legar,
child support and alimony as stated Pomeroy Fire Chief, the fire
in a separation agreement between department was summoned at 3: 18
the plaintiff and the deceased on
a.m. The home was severly
Oct. 5, 1979.
damaged, according to Legar. A
The plaintiff further requests wood burning stove was blamed.
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Senate· production royalties on oil and gas
Mrs. Jenkins and daughter were
House eonferees working on a leases which were owned by the home at the time d the fire. Mrs.
funding bill to keep the government deceased, also allegedly agreed Jenkins awakened and diSCOVered
running have agreed to btclude a upon In the separation document.
the wall behind the stove on fire.
directive that would give ·priority
In November, Meigs County
The Pomeroy Fire Department
consideration to the replacement d Common Pleas Judge Charles was at the scene untO 6: 45 a.m.
the brtdge that spans the Ohio River Knight awarded Mary JaneTalhott Twenty-six men answered the call.
between WUJiamstown, W.Va:, and almost $2 million from the Ohio The Middleport tanker truck was
Marietta, Ohio, Sen. Rnbert Byrd Power Co. In a wrongful .death also at the scene. No dollar value
A SOCK FUlL OF TOYS -The special Otrlslmatt Rulllnd wMihe winner. Ills name wM !M!fected from
said Monday.
action which was flled after Terry has been set.
project of employes of Bank One, Rutland Brandl, IUIICIIII llOII'IIIIUmty children eight and wder who
The 84-year-old bridge has been D. . Talbott was electrocuted on
The home was Owned by Mrs.
re&amp;itt 1 eel lor &amp;he evml.
·
was llllbts a slx·loollllocklngwlthlllftator1CN11ehtcky
closed for safety reasons, creating a Sept.l3, lll81asaresuit rl coming In Jenkins' parents, Charles and Ju(fy
youngster. Five year old Jonathon DeDavalle of
severe economic Impact on the contact with downed power Unes on Bolin, Rutland. It Is not known 11
Rt. 7 just north of Pomeroy.
there was Insurance.
entire area, said Byrd, D·W.Va .
•
u

---------------------------------------~ Potting soil. incident

Judgments sought
by Meigs farmers

Pomeroy
family
homeless
a

New bridge
bill work
continuing
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�Tuesday, December 17, 1985

Comment

Dumping.a lousy arithem'___J_am_es_J_.K_ilpa;___tric_k.

ll1 Cow1 Street

Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~ ....,_,.._"'"T'", .........c:::l.....
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
I'AT WJUTEHEAD
Alelltut Publlsber/Conlroller

BOBHOEFUCR
General Manapr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Edllor
i.ETI'ERS OF OPINION
1~.

are welcome. 'Illey should be lesJ thaD 300 words

All letters are subJect to editing and must be sJined with name, addres11nd

telepbont number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leners should be 1n

iood t1s1e, addressing tssues, not personall11es.

Deep flaws in.
political acumen
Regardless of what comes ot President Reagan's promise to refonn the
nation's tax codP, last week's desertion ot House Republlcans wm nearly
killed the proposal ootrlght shoWEd deep llaws In Ills political acumen.
Many of the Republicans, wm felt slalt wt ot the legislative process, laid
the blame at the feet of Donald Regan, t11e me-time Treasucy secretacy
wm drew up lbe Initial re!onn proposal last year and lben became
Reapn's chief of staff and top strategist.

Regan's abrasive manner, tactical advice and Inexperience In t11e
lntrtcacles It Capitol Hill resulted In a stuMlng SEtback t&gt;r Reagan, wm
had made tax refonn his No. 1 legtslatlve priJI1ty.
.
Wblte House spokesman Larcy Speakes curtly denied the suggestiOn
from 901111' Republicans and House Speaker Thomas O'NeW that Reagan
Is "losing his grip" on Congress.
SpeUes referml to tl1e "49 states" wiEre the president won an
averWbelmJng re- elEction mandate and a string of other legislative
victories.

,

One top presidential strategist dismissed Wednesday's defeat as a
"sklnnllb" lost to "petulant" House Republlcans wm merely waniL'd to
"get 801111! recognition ...
"We haven't lost the war; we haven'teven klsta battle," the official said.
"It was just a sklrmlsll. I don't mind losing a sklrmlsh, but not wren your
own people shoot you In the foot."
'lbe president al8o has iliEar much ot the blame.
He penlated In tbousands of miles of travel around the countcy Ibis year
to spetlk on behaH of tax refonn, apparently mistaking lbe enthusiasm
Main Street crowds had for a presidential visit with support for a
compllcaiL'd piece of legislatiOn.
He allo apparently dismissed the view of RepubliCan senators traveling
with blm to thelrmme states that IIErewas llttleconstltuentbtterest In tiE

Issue.
Pl!rhaps I1UII Important, Reagan apparently was bllndslded by the
House vote Wednelday In which 164 Republlcansdelled him by dEfeating a
pi'OCI!GiralllfOOJid rule for debating the measure.
'lbe Repablbns, explaining their defection, cited their frustration with
being relepted to the sidelines wren Reagan decided eany Ibis year to let
Rep. Dan Rostenkowsld, D-lli., c~ ot tiE Hoose Ways and Means,
write a bill without Wblte House Interference.
When the ·committee delivered Its fi!lal product - Including many
provlsloal Reagan did not like - the president told House Republlcans to
SllllPOrt tiE Democratic biD and count m the REpublican Senate to Improve
lt.
After the Slllllrise defretlon It all bu I 14 House Republicans, Reagan still
apparently did DOt know what hit him.
Meeting with about :ll Republicans after the vote, Reagan lmpklred
them to vote for final passaged tax re!onn. They !Ought, but by Saturday
had DOt received, wrttten assurances that he would fight In the Senate &lt;11
behalf of changes they coulll not win In t11e Hoose.
The assurance coulll DOt be given lor fear ot klslng Derrocratlc votes lor
b1s prWd bill.
With the House recessing Thursday night unw Monday, hoping to
ad)cium lor the year two days later with or witmut action, Wblte House
otlk)lals !ICfiUllbled to put togetiEr a new accord over t11e weekend.
~planned one last effort with a visit to Capitol Hill Monday to meet
with Houle Republicans to !Ollclt their support personally.
speallell pmclalm!d the admlnlstratkm has enough votes to pass lhe bW
ev~ as O'NeW demanded - and did not receive - a pei'!IOnal assurance
trun Reagan that 50 to 75 Republicans would vote "yes."
s&amp;idSpeakesonlastweek'sdeteatoftiErule: "Thlshashappenedmany
tlmlls before,..
Bjlt the House has rarely defeated a rule- especially wren a president
S)lel!dS a year campaigning for lt.

:: Ber.ry's World

Item three: The song ls unslnga·
· WASHINGTON - Caldwell Til·
words. All the words. As It is worse than the second. Here the .
comb, a professor d music at ble. Yes, the sopranos of the
commonly sung, with only the first Brtllsh are reYned as hirelings and ·
Brandeis University, Is promoting Mormon Tabernacle Clxllr can
verse, "The Star-Spangled slaves wmse bklod has wastEd out
a smashlngly good idea. He wants make lt. A tenor from the Metropol·
Banner" Is the world's only natiOnal "their foul' footsteps' pollution."
to dump "The Star·Spangled ltan Opera can goet to lbe rocket's
anthem that ends with a question: Sing that to Maggie Thatcher!
Banner" as oor natiOnal anthem red glare, but 99 percent of the
Does the banner stU! wave? In tl1e Stanza four gives us the poetically
and to replace It with "America the American public, trying to rmch succeeding three verses - the unforgivable: "Then conquer we
Beautiful." Let us hear three meers the land ol the free, will collapse verses that are almost never sung must, when our cause it is just." ·,
along the way.
- the question ls answered afflrma· Aargh!
and a tiger lbr Titcomb!
I digress long enough to say that
L!x&gt;k·at the music: If you try the · lively, but It Is answered tn verse
Writing in The New Republic, the
most
~nverelgn anthems are pretty
that would make a teacher of
professor makes a oonvlnclng case. Banner in C, the rangoe I&lt; from
dreadful. England's "God Save tiE ·
Item me: Our natiOnal anthem middle C on the south side to tiE G English weep.
·
Queen"
has a certain majesty. The
The
lyrics
were
Inspired,
you
wm
12
notes
to
the
north.
If
yw
try
It
In
isn't as hallowed as people think It
Confederate
States d Amertca had
two
flats,
you
go
down
io
a
B-flat
recall,
when
Francis
SCott
Key
1s. Contrary il popular relief, 'The
a
rouser
In
"Dixie.
Land." But the
Star-Spangled Banner" has been and up .to an unreachable F. By watched the British mmbardment
the natkln's official !ling &lt;Illy since rontrast, "Amertca the Beautiful" of Fort McHenry, Md., in 1814. Key French "Marseillaise" Is a toughie
rangoes mly from the D above was a lawyer by trade, andhewrtte for amateurs. Among our own
1931.
Iteni two: Our anthe!lllsn't even middle C to the fruited plain m the as many lawyers write: poorly. In sovereign states, . we have some
our own. The music \11115 written by E that Is little more than an octave his second verse, the Brtllsh fleet good ones In Indiana's banks d the
an Engllslunan, John Stafford away. Moreover, "America tiE becomes "the roe:s haughty host." Wabash and Kentucky's old Ken· '
Smith, as a drinking song t&gt;r Beautiful" Is a mmegrown product The U.S. flag is flying above "tiE tucky mme,' but except where the · ·
London's Anacreon Sxlety. How -music by Sam~el Ward, lyrtcs by towering steep." Key tmught Inter- states have approprlaiL'd a profes·
nal ri\Ynies were nifty: "Now It sional's music ("Georgia on My
members managed to sing It, Katherine Lee Bates.
Item lour: If yru think the catches the gleam of tiE morning's Mind" and "Oklahoma!"), the
unless they were roarlngdrunk,ls a
Banner's music Is awful, klok at the first beam." The third verse Is anthems do not Inspire. Who could
mystery, for that lrlngs us to ...
whistle tiE North Dakota hymn?
As Professor Titcomb notes, ·
. I CERTAIJI'L."( A&amp;REE
"America the Beautiful" has been "
~lq' "ffil~ GA~BAGE
urged as a better cmlce from time ·•
to time In the past. In a poll ··
5KOUL~ BE TAKEN
conducted by the Boston Globe In · •
ouT;~~~
1977, It wiped out the Banner by .,
better than 2-to-1. The National Federation of Music Clubs long ago ·"
... AMP I ?1.1\M
...euTA~fmL.V
took a strong stand in Its favor. In
TO mE OUT THIS
COt4Cei'VEP PLAN TO TAKE
candor, It has to be said that the '"
GA~E/.
6A~8AGE OUT COUI.t)
second and third stanzas of "Amer· ;,
lea the Beautiful" are no great ·11
6E FI.AWEP.. ·
shakes as poety eltiEr, but they're ,,
not as yecchy as tiEunsunestanzas ; ~
of the Banner.
. Rep. Andy Jacobs It Indiana has •
bttroduced a bW, H.R. 1&lt;52, that '' •
would replace tiE Banner with the ·: ·
Beautiful. He is letting his bill Ue .r.
germinating under t11e winter ·•
snows, but come next spring he, "
plans to give It a good p.1sh. Evecy
ballpark basso who has reached for
tiE high C In "The Star-Spangled · ·'
Banner," and tumbled the note
disgracefully, will wish tiE con- "·
gressmBQ well.
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p AC.election process__J_ac_kA_nd_er_so_n_&amp;_Jo_se_p_hs_v..,....ea-'r::r':;;ii
lng, lnsplratkln or encouragement
In this vmture, a forthcoming
report by ~ non·partlsan Center
for Responsive Polltlcs should be
stlmulatlng. We've obtained a draft
of this exhaustive report, which is to
be released later this month. Here
are lllme ol the mournful numbers
that make clear the urgency of tiE
situatiOn:
Campaign spending for the 1984
federal, state and local electiOns
was $1.8 bUllon, compared with tiE
$425 mllllon spent In 19'72. EDen
Mlller, the center's director, told
our associate Les Whitten, "In the
.next. presidential-election year,
1988, it wm almost certainly be well
over S2 billion."
- Congressional campaign
spending alone totaled
mWion In
1974 and $3'14 mUiion last year.
-Thedlseaselsspreadlng.Some
candidates for state legislatures
spent more than $1 mllllon In 1984; a
few years ago, thatsumWIUidhave
financed a respectable run tlr the
U.S. Senate In a major state.

m

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- PACs gave almost $113 mllllon challenger, Jim Hunt, who spent' ~
to ·federal candidates last year, $9.4 million.
: JJi1
almost lO times the m4 total.
- Winning a close Hwse elt:ttkli1
- These Increases result from in m4 cost, 011 average, SOO.!ID.
"less (reliance) on traditional last year tiE prtce tag was Sfi),IOI,:
political tools, tiE grass-roots net· and tn 1!W; It will probably top ..,..:
works, canvassing or rallies," the 31'&gt;00,101.
· ··:~
stucly dlscQ.Vered, "In favor ot more·
- PACs are edging small:, .,;;
expensive, sophisticated tech· contributors out ol t11e picture. In:
nlques (llke) polling services, com· 1974, 46 percent ol House campaign• . .
!liters, direct mall and 'high tech' contributiOns and 38 percent bt
advertising."
Senate races carne from donors ol , •.,.
- Another cause of tiE huge $100 or less. Last year small:::;:::
Increase In campaign spending ls oonatlons made up only .19 percent ' ·""
the length of the campaigns of House candidates' fUnding and 23 ·
tl1emselves. Even before a fresh. percent In Senate races.
; ,.;:,
man · member of Coogi'ess has
- Corporate PACs have grown ,~
settled Into his Washington office, 1,190 percent since 1974; labor •"4'
he's already collecting money for PACs, which made up one-third of'
tiE next election (and so are his the total In 1974, conslttuted ooly : •.;,.
opponents).
one-tenth last year.
- The average cost It a winning
- In House races, PAC money •
Senate race has soared from rose from an average of $10,101 per •
$598,101111 llr16 to almo6t S3 mllllon candidate In 1974 to $89,101 last · •
last year. The average may be $5 year; In the Senate races, the
mllllon next year. Sen. Jesse average went from $47,101 to ,..
Helms, R·N.C., spent $16.5 million $405,101.
to squeeze by his Democratic

r

:.u-:nw,:!'

CWUANDan' (fit) -BW!am, IJ.2-24; Cochrm,
.!1.241; &amp;own, \.2-4; Poe. ~10; Norris, 9-3-21; Tlnsll'y ,
1).0(); ~ffort , 1.0.2; Brntcher. 0+4: AllPn, :~-3-9 .
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Eason Interceptions while ·tiE " :
Dolphins lost three fumbles and ·
quarterliack Dan Marino threw oneInterception.
Mlaml!lllled to a 27-131ead 3:52
Into the fourth quarter on rookie
fUllback Ron Davenport's second
1-yard scoring run of the night. 'lbe
Patriots cut the dellclt to 27·~ &lt;11 a
1· yard run by Mosl Tatupu, tiEn
tied the game on the ensuing ldckoft
when Cedrtc Jones returned a·Joe
,.'
Carter fumble 16 yards for a
touchdown.
Miami took a 17·7 halftime lead .
'
on the first Davenport touchdown, a "
6-yard pass from Marino to Joe
Rose, and a 44· yard field goal by
Revelz. New England's only first. . · ·
half score was a lO.yard Eason pass
to Fryar.
Revelz had a 49-yard field goal iii .
the third quarter, and the Patriots'·..
Tony Franklin kicked lleld goals of • '
22 and 49 yards. ·
"Well, wesureflnd a way to keeP. •
it interesting," said Miami coach ~
Don Shula. "We had a two .&lt;
touchdown lead rut we let them · ·'

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RIO GRANDE .:_ Rio Grande's
Redmen used a 3-polnt play late In
tiE game by Joe Verhoff which
provided them with a six· point lead
that was never"rellnqulshed as the ·
Redmen·held on for an 84-82 vlctocy
over Oakland City; Ind.
Vermrr finished with 21 points,
secondtoMikeSmlth's26whlleRon
Rltttnger had 15 for Rio Grande,
now 11·2, Robert Begharn scored 24
points for Oakland, 3-9.
Elsewhere, Southern Indiana tEat
Wright State, 84-75; Wittenberg
downed Heidelberg, 73-64; Otter·
beln outlasted Wilmington, 81·75 In
STOI'I'ED - New Elllland l'alrlo&amp; nmnlnr back
overtime; and Cedarville blasted
Mosl Tapupu 18 slopped short ol a llrsl down by
Palm Beach Atlantic, 103-73.
.. Dolphin defenders Bud Brown (43) and Don McNeal

'::1

Return of the GOP govemor__R_ob_er~t~_a_lte_rs ::

mi~takes

next week or a loss by the New York
Jets or Patriots, mth 10.5. The
vlctocy guaranteed Miami at least
a wlld-card berth In the playoffs.
New England, which could have
won the division with a vlct.ocy, wlll
need to beat Cincinnati next week
whlle t11e Jets and Dolphins both
lose to capture the East. A triumph
over the Bengais wlll give the
Patriots a wUd-card bid.
"I never tmui:ht about It,"
Patriots' coach RaymOnd Bercy
said ol the losing streak In Miami.
"I don't think that matters at all.
This ls a different team, a different
set of clrcumstanres. We certainly
weren't worried about It on the
field."
Running back Craig James said
tl1e Patriots fell because Miami was
able to make "the last big play."
"We did a good job In the second
half tcylng to do evecythlng we
could to put points on the hoard,"
said James. "And we put a lot of
points on the board. The game was
played In· a steady rain, which
contributed to eight turnovers. New
EiiJ!lanLd IO!it one fumble and three

Rio Redmen
•
post VICtory

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Bengals ponder key

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CLAYMONT, Del. (NF..A) - PoliU· election nul year.
,
clans' clali!\1 about bow pllenomenally In addiU011to that atatlJtlcal advan·
'The GOP baa a &amp;ood chance of
The credibility of the Republicans' •·
•••
aucte~~ful they will be In the next tace, tbe Republicans believe they can JiCOrln&amp; slcntflcant pins," concludes clalma Is further enhanced by the u.
:;.
electiODihoilld leldom be takl!li lfri. ,capltalbe upon both fortullout clr· newsletter editor Charles E. Cook Jr., aeuments of Democratic political .,,
Olllly becallll! they l1111.1lly have little CWIIIIaJicella a doleD or more states who believes tliat tbe Democrats strategists, wbo privately concede '·
••
••
relatloallilp to reality.
aDd tbe fact tliat almoll u many vot· "could end up barely lioldlac a major· that they could suffer a net loss ol four
But when the Republican GoYernors en ldeaWy willi Republlcaos u wttli lty ol tbe state bouleslf the GOP &amp;eta or five governorships next year. ..
f'
,•
Alloclatlon held Ita lillual coolereoce Democrats.
a few breaks."
here r«etly, ltlleac!en may bave
"FortheflniUmelllmyZOyearsof
,.
•
beea ooly all&amp;btly euaeratlne when work," political po11lter Robert Teetliey predicted a aubltantlal GOP net ter told tbe GOP 1overnors here, "we
••
piD In next year'• pbernstorlal con- csn 1111! the nsme Republican" to iden·,
testa 8CI'OII the COUDtry.
Wy the parly'a candidates without
Pamylvlllla Gov. fUchanl'l'liorD- fearin&amp; that It will lote more votes
burP, tbe outcoiDc RGA ciWrman, than It will pin.
Ollfllld the meetln&amp; by proclalmlq In next year'1 electlona, 1S lncumuU§T WeNT ON §ociaL
tfiat llepuhllcaos "bave 1ft opportani· boat Democratic pvernon (an UniiiU·
ty to plc1l up elpt or 10 -Ia In liH." ally larce number) will not be seeking
~CURITV. Gee, f..IVI~G oN C1
'
New Hamplldre Gov. Jalm Sun1111u, re-election, either because they are
I.
FixeD
iNcoMe
i~
TOUGH!
lhe lnConiiDC RGA cbalrman, ciOied barred by their states' constllutioos
" ... An' 118ctwsh of unconshlnsnble behavior
lhe ~CIII by .-rt1n&amp; tliat the 001' from IM!fVlna another term or because
DoN'T !&lt;HOW HoW I'M GoHNa Mal&lt;e
,.• allh' offlsh Chrlsmuspsrfy I do - I do hereby
will "capture the maJorl.ty or the au- tbey,are voluotarily stepping .down.
.. '
iT ON $1.5 BILLioN DaY!
FIRE MYSHELFI"
that
are
up
for
elecIn
three
of
tliole
s~tes
_
Arizona,
•
,.
In fact 1M GoP hu no place to 10 Colorado aDd Oklahoma - a Republl·
but up. Wltla tlie exception of 1 111ree- cu contender currently has a slight
JNI' perlad 1n the late IHOI allll -ly edae in the conlelt to elect a aucces,
11701, the Oemo..'l'lta bave contrGiled :·.l:'~.{.
;,g.r:~pub~~
•• •
the majority of the uUoa'a &amp;overDOr·
'
hi
llhlpa for a.e than 1 quarter of 1 can rellnqullblng the pvernors p
'Jbday Js Tuesday, Dec. 17, lbe lilst day of 1985 with 14 to tlllow.
century.
and a Democrat sllshtly favored in
'"
'Qte moon ls approaching Its first quarter. ·
18
~the late 1870., Ill the wake ol
8&amp;.
~ momlng stars are Mercucy, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
the Waterpte scandal, the number o1
'l1101e -ments come from the
'Ale eveolne star ls Jupiter.
GOP aovernon dwlndled to 12 and the Cook Political Report, a widely re~ born 011 thtS date are WJder the sign of Sagittarius. They Include
RGA ltlffnd Uiroup a 1p1te of bad •pectecl WuliiJi&amp;lon-bued political
A$ran Revolutlllnacy War soldier Deborah Sa~. who dlsgulled
'IQMIItlnl tbat 111 yearly meet· newsletter wbole llltolllkely 18M p·
lit!i'II!X during three years d service, In 1'100; poet John GrmtleafWhlttler
couflf be bi'ld In a larp ciOMI.
bernstorlal battlecrounda lnchidet :
Republlcanl came c!OH to Florida, Idabo, Mlclilpn, Soulli Dlko1n im; novelist Erskine Caldwell In 19IXI, and slnil,er-actor Tcrnrny Steele
acblevlnl equltr· ill the -Iy 18101, ta, Tenn11m and Tesu.
In t36 (age 49.)
when they narrowed the Democrata'
1n addition, · the new~letter rates
1)1 Ibis date in histocy:
.
illlr&amp;ln
to
fl·U
but,
u
Thombur&amp;b
0011testa
for nine ...ts now held by
IJ 19m, Orville and Wilbur Wright made histocy's first suc:oessful
noled,
"we
took
very
heavy
hils
Oemocrata
utaau£;~ racea are ·
al!jlaDe lllght, soaring over the sand dunes near Kitty Hawk, N.C..
Ill 1111 at the Ume of the _.wale 111 A'··•· Hs •"
.._,_ N•
~ 19'Zi, Anny Gen. wuuam "Billy" Mitchell, outapoken advocate of a
downturn."
_..,
w-.
'
- ·CAr·
brub, New Mexico, Oblo, Soutli
~ate U.S. Air Force, was found guUty It conductt:rejudlclal to tiE good •
As a IWIIII, the RepubllcaJil now ollna and Wyomln&amp;. Allo ID tbe '-Up
It ihe armed services. Twenty years later, he waa!XJI(IIulnouSly awarded
areaalbeaborlendofaU..llpolltlcal catea0f1 are four lelta now held by
~(llll'ellslonal Medal d Honor.
cllviiiOD of 1M IO'•DCaalllps - but Republicans - 1D Ca!Uomia,llllnola,
J.Ji 19.11, the Nazi warship Graf Spee was scuttled ofrtll! coast of Uruguay the Democrata mlill delead UJree.. Iowa and Pennsylvania.
1 as British vessels pursded lt.
foartlll (27 ol H) of tbe -Ia up for '
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MIAMI (UPI) - Of tiE 18
straight losses the New England
Patriots have suffered in tl1e
Orange Bowl to the Miami Dol·
pblns, none was crueler than the
:Jl-27 defeat Monday night.
The Patriots had rallied for two
touchdowns In a J.5.second span
midway through the fourth quarter
to tie the score 27·27. After Miami
went ahead on rookie Fuad Revelz's thlrd fleldgoalof the game, a 47·
yarder in a steady rain with 4: 27
.. left, thePatrlotscalmlydrovetotll!
Miami 34 and were In excellent
shape to get at least three points
and send the game Into overtime.
It seemed this would be tiE time
the Patriots beat the Jinx.
Then disaster struck. Miami's
Glenn Blackwood picked off his
second Tony Eason pass of the night
GAME SAVING I'LAY· - Millllll's Glenn
Miami territory Monday nllhl· Blackwood Is pursued with !56 seconds left- a'ter nearly
Blacllwood (47) lnleroepis Tony Eason's paM late In
by Craig James (U). 'l1le Dolphlm won 00.2'7, taking
Intercepting a pass on th ~ previous
the fourth qualer lo slop a New Enl!land drive deep In
sole pu sses!llon or 11rs1 place In tiE AFC Easl. UI'L
play - to preserve Miami's sixth
straight vletocy and put the Dol·
phins alone atop the AFC East with
an U-4 record.
The Dolphins can seal the East
title
over 2·13 Buffalo
·aNCIN"'ATI (UPI) - Several game, rut If I hado't fumbled the I had thrown It a little bit higher.
theortes as to 11ow the Bengals ball right tiEre I don't think we W1En I let thlit ball go, I thought It
managed to let the Redsklns would have lost,'' Colllnsworth said was six."
overcome a 17·polnt second-quarter of his fumble on a double reverse.
That was as close as the Bengals
deficit and post a 27·24 vlctocy Minutes later, Genrge Rogers burst would come to scortng untU the
surfaced following the outcome, up the middle for a 34- yard game's final minute, when the
~md most of them were offered by
touchdown run and a 27-24 Reds- Bengals drove lor a posslbl~
the culprtts themselves.
kiDs' lead. "When you have 45
game-tying field goal.
Cris Collinsworth's fourth· quar· people working as hard as we were,
But with tiE ball on the Redsklns'
ter fumble set up the Redsklns you hate to think you let them 22 yard line, Eslason was sacked by
wlnnlng score. Quarterback Boo- down."
Rich Milot.
mer Eslason threw an interception
Eslason had thrown for :1)2 yards
"I smuldn't have taken the
in the end zone early In the second just 16 minutes Into the game, but sack," Eslason said. "I could have
quarter and was sacked with for the rest ol the afternoon he only ca)led an audible. but the crowd
seconds left In the game, forcing threw for 155 more. And on two was ~n loud I dldo't think tiE otfe!ISe
Jim Breech to attempt a much oreassions, Eslason made decl· woulll be able to hear lt."
longer field goal in an attempt to tie sions that cost t11e Bengais dearly.
Consequently, Breech had to tty a
the game. Louis Breeden was
With tiE Bengais leading 24·7 and 5l·yard field goal Instead of a
unable to contain Washington facbtg a third and goal from tiE five 39-yarder to tie tiE game. Breech's
ldck t!ll smrt and to the ell to the
receiver Art Monk, who&gt; ~r~=~ yard line, Eslason threw into the
for 2:ll of the Redsklns' 21
end zone lor Eddie Brown, but right. And In the spirit that
yards.
Washington's Curtis Jordan
pervll(led the Bengal klckerroom,
he took tiE blame lor that
Collinsworth aann~d~~~~~n pre- stepped In and picked It olf.
ferred to blame tli
"'!'hilt hurt," Estason said. "I
"I got a good look at the ball. I just
tmught I had Eddle. I would have If didn't put It through," he said.
"I don't think
times wiEre 1

J-..e

WASHINGTON - Favors are
part of a politician's stock bt trade.
He's expected lo produce govern·
ment contracts, pobllc·wm-is JrO·
)eels and Jobs for the people IE
represents. They. bt tum. may
contribute to b1s election campalgil.
This Is a clumsy, capricious
system, h1lbJy wlnerable to abuse.
Many politicians begin ttadlng
favors for contributiOns. Given t11e
blgh cost of calq)algns,lt's dUtlcult
for a politician il goet elected
witbout selling b1s soul to special
Interests.
Then, when tiE carrc&gt;aign con·
trlbutors come around to coiled oo
their "investment," It winds up
costing the taxpayers bllllons of
dollars In speclal·lnterest benefits.
Congrl!sa, with Its usual tlrnldlty
wiEre campaign financing is con· .
cerned, Is making noises about
reforming thf system by curbing
the runaway spending ol political
action committees, known as
PACs.
If our legislators need awaken·

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Orange Bowl jinx continu~; ·~:;
Dolphins edge Patriots, 30-27~·

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-MiddlePort. Ohio
L!Bsclay, December 17, 198

.

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

&amp;10 GIL\NDE (It) - Wolk&gt;, 4~ Smllh. !W.26:

Rlttlnll'l". 6\J.l~: Verhoff, ?.7-21 ; Rllz, 1-1-3; Cothan:l.
0.0.0: Kl'ml. l.().'J; F\lmiA', ,1.2-8; Rayrroll'. O.H
tVrALIIa.IHI
Hatftlmr soort- oaJcland ... Rio 4.1.

FIRST DEER- Michael Ruseell, 13-yeaNJid 11011 of Ted and Marsha
RuMeU. MlnersvDie, bagged his flnli deer, INs ll·polnt bud!, an
Saturday, Dec. 7.

NFL results

NATIJNM. FOOTBALL 1.£\GVE
By Unkcl PreY IIMfMII&amp;Ional

....C.'*'"*

Amtrt:•

iootball has to the total mission at
t11e Air Force Academy. I really
enjoy the great state d Colorado,"
oeBercy said.
When asked Sunday If he would
be Interested If the fUce job were
offered, Faust said: "I don't know.
That's a hard question to answer. I
wouldn't be here If I wasn't
lnteresiL'd .
"I'm very impressed with them
(Rice olflclals)," he said. "I'm
impressed with the city. I'm
Impressed with tiE university. It's a
unique unlverslty and a class
university."
Faust, 50, was interviewed d~r·
lng the weekend and tiEre are no
more Interviews scheduled. But
Rice ofllctals said that did not mean
Faust I; t11e top candidate to

replace Watson Brown, wm resigned Dec. 6 to become head coach
at Vanderbilt.
Faust has just about evecything
Rice ls looklng for, except an
impressive won·lost record. He hl!s
a solid prtvate school background
both at the high school level and at
Notre Dame, and Is used to strict
academic standards. He also Is a
"big name" who could recruit well.
Faust had an Ill !Standing J8. year
high school record at Cincinnati
Moeller, where his teams were
174-17-1. But at Notre Dan;e, he
stepped down after live years and a
:Jl·26-1 mark.
Rice has not had a winning
seasori slnre 1963 when the Owls
finished 64. In 1972, tl1e Owls were

NY""'
Indl11111 polls

eight steals and lour blocked shots
In NortiErn's . three games last
week.
For the week, Battle was 26 of45
from t11e field and 11 ol19 from the
free throw line .

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Gc*trn Slalf II Ofrrwr. 9:;11p.m,

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WashingtOn I! S!. l..oli1, ' p.m .

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Clr'YPland 111 NY Jf.ts, I p.m.
Grw11 Ray 1111Tamp1 Bl~ . I p.m.

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STIHI:
Under the Tree
The STIHL FS·51AVE - alightweight.
easy·to·handle weed and grass trim·
mer. Features a long-running, ga-·
soline·powered engine. No extension
cord needed! With aquick-starting ig·
nitition system. The ideal gift for any
homeowner!
· The STIHL chain saw you get this
Christmas to cut the Yule log and keep
... the woodpile,stocked will be doing the
same job next year, and the next and
the next... it's the best gift you could
get. Or give.
See the 09, 015. 024AV and 228's.

-~ccessories

10°/o Off
Bar &amp; Chain Oil 20°/o Off

In case of loss from fire,
theft or other mlsfonune.
an up-to-date Inventory
of your possessions will .
help you get your lnsur·
ance claim settled quick·
ly and to your satlsfac·
fon. We furnish our poa.
cyholders with a Per- .
sonal Property Inventory
booklet that provides an
easy. organized
to
record the Inform~~~ .

GOOD

LITTLE
DAN'S
EXXON
·
402 EAfr MA..
992-9907
rOMIIOY

O.Uaa at Doiron. nllftl

10

TI'IOndaY'• Relllll

Put a

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
606 EAST MA..

[)p(roH at Satl'i~0.10:3lp.m .
Phombl ar SHrill&gt;, 11::11 p.m.

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LA Lakt'nll N..w Vork. 7;l)p,m.
V1lh at Waahlna1Qn, 7::JJ p.m.
'NfWJenl'Y•I A.llanla.. T:~p.m .,
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PNJaddphhtllllndlanl. T!3lp.m.

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TOLEDO, Olllo (UPI) - Kenny
Battle of Northern llllnols has been
selected the Mid·American Confer·
ence basketball player of the week.
Battle, a 6-foot-6 sophomore from
Aurora, Ill ., scored 63 points,
gral&gt;bed ~rebounds, had 11 assists,

· ··.:
::~ :

'

Phlia&lt;k'lphlil
St. Looll

5·5-1.

Battle clwsen as player of week

UPI.

San Dk&gt;flu
Kansa11Cit y
N.t-.a (A)nlr.reno•

WLTPct.
0 .71'1
10 s 0 6li7

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Nrw Enalnd

HOUSTON (UP! ) - Fonner
Notre Dame Coach Gercy Faust,
the first to be lnle!VIewed for the
opening ol football coach al Rice
University, said he plans to make a
decision soon oncoaching oppo{lun·
ltles at three schools.
Faust also Is oonslderlng offers
from Division J.AA Youngston
State and Marshall.
However, YSU Athletic Director
Joe Malmlsur said Monday he
understood Faust has received a
better olfer from another school.
Malmlsur did not Identify tiE other
school, but he added that Faust
canceled a second visit to Young·
stown planned for today.
MeanwhUe, Rice officials report·
edly are interested In several other
coaches, Including Furman's Dick
Sheridan, Army's Jim Yrung and
Air Force's Fisher DeBercy, who
was In Houston Monday for a
·Bluebonnet Bowl news conference.
But DeBercy said Rice had not
contacted him and he was ·pot
Interested.
"I'm wcy happy at the Air Force
Academy ... I feel a very, vecy big
responslb.illty toward the basiC
mission that I think lbe academy
has and tiE relationship that

Miami.

~----------------------------------------~
)'~ lbhed ...........
7 0 . ~11

Y·Miaml

Faust offered another coaching.job

(28) In the l1rsl quarter ol Monday's NFL pme IIi ·-.:•.

POMEROY

WI DO IUS SEIVICE I
AUGII.IIT 011 MOn CAIS •

t,t

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-8887
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4 The

Sentinel

December 17, 198'&amp;

·Alabama defeats
Seminoles, 100-98
By GERRY MONIGAN
VPI SpoN WrlleJo
'The Tide last night rolled Into the

same class as some pn!tty heady
company.
Alabama rallied for a 10089
II1umph over F1orlda State at
Birmingham, Ala., the 1,1Wth
success In Crimson Tide hlstocy.
"I think you got your money's
worth. I sure did," said Alabama
Coach Wimp Sanderson, who ad·
dressed the home crowd In a
ceremony at rnld-&lt;.'OIIrt alter the
game. •It' s lilting to get the l,IWth
win here In Blnnlngharn. It's a
great moment for our program."
Buck Johnson led the way with 23
pobrts and Terry Coner hit 8 lrl!e
throws In tbe last five minutes to
seal the lrturnph, making Alabama
the 36th NCAA learn to reach the

·milestone.
'The Tide, ~. held a J.5.polnt lead
two minutes Into the second half.
· 'The Seminoles, 4-2, carne hack to
lake a '10-69lead on David Shaffer's
I!).foot jurnpshlt with 9: 27 left.
Pee Wee Barber, who Jed F1orlda
State with 23 points, tied the score
11·71 wtth a fn!e throw. The
Seminoles began pressing for tur·
novers, but Instead fouled Caler
IUIIIei'OUS Urnes.
At Beaumont, Texas, Don Red·

Campbell
SJuda given ~
consideration~..

den scored a game-high 19 points,
leadlngco-No. ll Louisiana State to
a 74-57 vlctory over Lamar, breakIng the Cardinals' five-game win·
nJng streak.
Using a full-court press, the
unbeaten Tigers llmited the Card!·
nals, :&gt;-2, to their lowest JX&gt;Inl total of
the season.
The Cards kept It close until LSU,
8-0, broke away In ttl&gt; last five
minutes of the first half to take a

•
•

•

:Marauderettes dump

•

BELPRE -Meigs remained one

Alexander and .VInton County.
UsJq a balanced scoring attack
· willie commlttlng mly four tumov·
• ers, Meigs coach Ron Logan called
tlJJs the Marauden!ttes best game
to date.
"'bbs was wltlwt a doubt our best
game this )II'IU'. We rebounded well
:and our overall scoring was good.
We handled the ball super,' com·
··meat.ed Loran.
·. Meigs' lone senior Jodi Harrison
Jed- the scoring P,BI'Ide with 14
points and also grabbed four
l'l!bouMs. Juniors Jennl Swartz and
Jennl Cruch eacl! soored lO points
while Swartt led Meigs ln rebound·
Jng With six and Couch jlfabbed
rour. Jenny Miller added eight
points while twin-sister Julie carne
down Wl)h four rebounds. Tammy
Wright came &lt;tf the bench to score

hap, !lOOks and o&amp;her equipment lu ~ team. Team
members Include, left to right In lront, Mary Jane
CwTy and Sarah Hannon, In rear, David Karr, BW
White, Ray .Laudennllt, BID Neutzllng and Hup
Roush. Patty Hays, physical education teacher at the
school, Is coach. Hays Is a•slstA&gt;d by Dee Brown.
·

basketball team opened their season this momlng In
G•lllpoiJs against the Gallipolis Developmenlal
Center team. n.e Carleton team spans new uniforms
paid for by the Eagles' Ladles Auxlllacy Tug ol War
team. The entire auxiliary, wlllcll Is the main
supporter of the team. also donated basketballs, gym

Tar Heels keep No. 1 rating

NEW YORK (UP!) - One
ou ISlanding effort last week was
enough to keep North Carollila as
college basketball's No. I team.
Twelve Tar Heels contributed to
a 99-57 victory over Ohio Saturday,
grabbed 38 rebounds, committed 13 and that convinced 31 of 40
fouls, and lost passesslon only four members ot the UP! Board of
tlmes m turnovers. Belpre was Coaches to award their first-place
whistled tor 17 fnuls.
votes to Dean Smith and Co. The
The llnal two Marauderette Tar Heels were followed by MichiJX&gt;Ints were scored in spectacular gan, Duke, Kansas and Syracuse,
fashion as Marla Musser one- all In the same positions as last
handed a 60 footer at the final week.
buzzer that swished the cords.
The live teams have compiled a
Meigs' reserves boosted Hs re- 38·1 record. Only Kansas has lQst.
cord to 4-2 overall andJ.21n the 'IVC
North Carolina totaled 573 points
with a 33-27 win over the Belpre In the balloting to 533 tor Michigan,
reserves.
Scoring for Meigs which won three games last week
Included Dee Henderson with nine, lor a ~mark.
Beth Ewing and Missy Woods
Michigan . received SI'Ven first.
seven each, Jodi Taylor and NlkkJ place votes, with the other too
Whitlatch had tour each, and Nancy. going to Duke. The Blue Devils,~.
Blankenship tOSSed In two markers. received 4~ points.
Rellerves - Meigs 33, Belpre %'1.

:Belpre·girls, 59-38
game behind league-leading Alex·
aDder by virtue ct an easy :i-311 win
.aver Belpre bere Monday In TVC
girls' bulletballactlon.
Now 5-1 overall and 4-1 In the
; TVC, the Marauderettes have a
· showdown rna~ With the undefeated Lady Spartans at Meigs
T'IIUnday at 5: 55 p.m. A Meigs win
would Ufe the , defetullng 'IVC
champions Into ;a first place tle with

name!!

41-31 lead.

"It was a matter of us being
physically outmanned," Lamar
coach Pat Foster sald. "We were
rot Intimidated by LSU, but they
have great talent. great quickness
and great strength."
James Nanre and James Gulley
each scored 17 points for Lamar.
In ~her games, Kevin Henderson
scored :aJ points and Richard
Morton added 16 to lead Fullerton
State to a 91-39 rout of Seattle....
Derrick Chii'Vous srored 17 points
to power Missouri to a 72-44 victory
over Souttv:&gt;rn Illinois. ... Gary
Swain seored ID points and Kenny
Evans added 19 to power Creighton
to a 92-64 victory over Austin Peay.
... Rob Harden scored 25 points and
Dwyane Randall added :aJ to lead
N!'Vada-Reno to a 92-61 victory over
Santa Clara.

PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Mar;
ton Campbell Is the past, FrECt
Bruney is the present and 26-~
old Davkl Shula-may be the tuturil
for the Philadelphia Eagles.
~
The Eagles Monday fll1!d CaiTllf,
hell after three seasons,
assistant coach Bruney as hi~
Interim successor and said Shuta;
the son of Miami Dolphins coac~
Don Shula, was a major candida$
for the permanent coaching job. ::
Both Philadelphia general ~
ager Harry Gamble and ownes
Norman Braman sald Campbell
was tired with one week left In tiwt'
season at his own request.
;
"Marlon mentioned to Harry thal
If the decision was · made td
terminate him as head coach, Ill!
would greatly appreciate It beinll
done very quickly," said Braman~
who purchased the Eagles las~
spring.
:
"With the respect I have tor
Markln Campbell, I felt I owed hlrd
that, and being that I had made ug
my mind (to make a change~, ~
thought I should accede to ~
wishes and Inform him,
I
Immediately."
Braman and Gamble met with
the young Shula one week ago~
discuss the Eagles' coaching joiJ;
but Braman said no offer has Yet
been made, although he hopes to fl\1
the position soon.
;-'
''He (Shu !a) Is a leader and pallt
of a winning tradition, which Is
Important," Braman said. "He hal;
all the qualities to be a head coacll
In the National Football League.''1.
Bramen said he has other
candidates for the job, Including
Jim Mora, coach of the Philadelphia · Stars of the U.S. Football
League, but he refused to elaborate
on them.
The owner sald he had Intended to
walt until the end of the season II)
decide Campbell's fate, but
changed his mind after Sunday'~
20-14 loss to San Diego.

I

No. 4Kansas solidified Its position
with an 83-66. victory over Ken·
tucky, knocking the Wildcats from
No. 8 to No. 14. Danny Manning
exhibited earl}' season All·Amerlca
form for the Jayhawks with a
game-high 22 points, a team-high 7
rebounds, and 3 assists, 2 steals and
a blocked shot.
Kentucky's Kenny "Sky" Walker
srored 12 points before forced to the
sideline with four minutes gone In
the second half when he was
accidentally poked In the eye.
Kansas, S-1, had 421 points, just
two more than Syracuse, which Is
6-{).

There was a mild shakeup in Nos.
6 to 10, with Georgetown and
Georgia Tech trading places. The
Hoyas. IHJ, moved Into sixth with
355 points to 344 !Or Georgia Tech,
which was Idle and remained at4-1.

Oklahoma, 8-0, moved up a notch
to eighth place with 2lJ JX&gt;Ints and
St. John's, winner over UCLA
Sunday, jumped from 13th place to
ninth with 202 points. Nevada-Las
Vegas, 6-1, remained In lOth place
with 194 JX&gt;lnts.
The mly new entry Into the top :aJ
was Pepperdlne, which look the
ID!h spot with a 6-1 record.
Dropping out ot I he elite was Ohio
State, 19th last week but a 79-70
loser to Arkansas In Its only game of
the week.
Louisiana State and Memphis
State, both 7-0, shared 11th place
with 163 JX&gt;Ints, followed by Illinois
(123). Kentucky (95 ), AlabamaBirmingham (85), Indiana (!Kl),
Louisville (61), DePaul (44), Notre
· Dame (38) and Pepperdlne (25) .
Voting was based on 15JX&gt;Ints lor
first place, 14 tor second, 13 for
third, etc.

OF INSURANCE OF THE STATE OF
OHIO, heftbY cettlfiellhll MIDWEST
MUTUAL IN$UAANCE COMPANY of
\YEST DES MOINES, Stall of IOWA.
nu complll&lt;f wtth Utt 11wt ot thlt

•

•

•

S VA C sconng, team statlsttcs
l"la,er, 61!1111
G Fr
Mllrl&gt; Kmlprr. NG ..... .'S 42
G~ U:-acbman Ea~t .'S 40
Scan Col~. HT · ......... 6 43
John ~!WppBrd. SV ....'i ll
IJrir;e.Barres, lfT ....... .Ii ll
Mike Hale, OH ..... ... .. .6 11
Sly f:lklorn&amp;eld. sv ..... !i 29
Todd Ql't&gt;l NG ..........~ :11
Jav Bo5rlc,k , Sou ........ 5 :n
Todd Hol!ll'ln. NG ..... .5 22
Todd Ad9JTI!. Soo .......~ 2:li
Rk:hCIIIml'\', KC ..... 5 '!I
Sfp,·pJarrt'll. trr ..... ..., :wl

six.

Fitch led the Lady Eagles with 17
points while Gerkin added eight.
Meigs shot out to a 1:&gt;-6 first
period lead and Increased that to
25-13 by halftime. With a JX&gt;werful
17-4 third stariza advantage, the
Maralldereties were running away
at 42-17.
.
Meigs took a whopplng87shotsat
the basket, making 25 fllr 29 per
cent. The winners made nine ct 22
foul shots for 41 per cent while
Belpre connected m a warm 71 per
cent, canning 10 ct 14. Meigs

John 11'Dm1J!10n. sv ...... n
Joh n Wollum . SW ......... 2-1

Fl 1'\1 -'"'
10 !M 111.8
12 92 18.4
Ul 104 17.3

A 1!6 IU
17 95 lU
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17
12

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li., 12.6

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Eric Fayt&gt;. OH ...........6 24 Zl
J("fl Culd-A·tU Easr .... !1 23 }()

68 ,11.3
:16 11·2
:16 l1 .2

Wayl"l' Oh~. NG ......5 21 14

Ed Collins, East .........5
KenThA&gt;y. ~

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........ 5 w

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Team offense

foiiCIWI on O.CemMr
Admitted Ant1!

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U1,1158 ,ViB .OO;
lltblli(lit
l1t,e&amp;Q,$88 .00;
Surpll.tl
19,301,001.00; lnt:ome $25,231 ,380.00;
E11p1ndlhHII $2$,302,57$.00: IN

v.

WITNESS WHEREOF, I hive htreun·
10 aubtCrll)td my name ltlcl caultcl
by n~l to bl affl11~ .11 Columbue ,
Ohio, lhlt dl"f anl:l date. July 1. 1185.

1\
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131 53 :119 6J.R
1~ fll liil Gl,J
lt'i !II 310 61.7

STATE OF OHIO, DEPARTMENT OF
INSURANCE, CERTIFICATE OF
COMPLIANCE.
The undefsigned. SUPERINTENDENT
OF INSURANCE OF THE STATE OF
OHIO, hereby Cetlillll 11'111 IN·
VESTOAS GUA~ANTY LIFE IN· ·
SUR.I!NCE COWPANY of LOS
ANGELES. Stall Ol CAliFORNIA.
has compiiiCI with tne lawt ol lhil
Stale appllu ble lo It end 11 euthorlz.
ld during thl current yur to tren~~~et

Ea~r £&gt;rn .................. 5
Hannan 'J'"rac&lt;&gt; .......... 6
Oak H11 .................. 6
SynvJ)(IS Val~ ........ ~
SoolhWl'Sr(lm ........... !\
l&lt;yl{{'l'" Croek ............ 5

1.22 51 !I( !\8.8
!n fl 2t2 48.4
7-t 'll 161! 11.6

Team defense
Telm
G fl Fl
Hannan TrK'l' ..... ..... 6 JJ) 41!
Southl:orn .................. ~ 9fl 6.1
Syrmn Val~ ........ ~ 117 47
F.allk'rn ................... ~ t2!&gt; !'i.l
Southwt'!tr&gt;rn .......... ~ 111 72
Ky~ ('rMc .... . : ... ~ 139 ll
North Callla ....... .. ~ 129 6.1
Qak HIY.................. 6 167 !Wi

Pill Awe
n :il.J
~

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In thiS 11a1e ill aQpropriflte bualneaa
ollnsurtr"ICe. lls finenclsl cond•tlonla
shown by lis ennutl stelement to

281 ~. 2

:m
n

~.6

have blltn aa tollows on December
3 1, 11UI4 · Adm itted · Assets
S56 .063 . B95 .00 :
Ltebllit 1es
U2 . 104 .1106.00 :
St.Hplus
S 12. 852 ,685 .00 :
Income
U7 , I 04,713 .00 ; Expenditure a
120,813 .&amp;32 .00 ;
Net
Auett
S1U5fl.'illl9.00; Ctplteii1 .10UCW.OO:
IN WITNESS WHEREOF . I hl¥1
hereunto subscrlbecl my name end
etu ~ ad mr seal to be alli•ld at Col ·
umbt.~l, Ohio. this daly and dare. Jllly
I.
1i85.
GEORGE
FABE ,
SUPERINTENDENT OF INSURANCE
OF OHIO.

61.:2

lJ 61 .6
:m 64.2
4ll 70.0

8UAANCE COfo!PANY OF WILM·
. INOTON, State of Dellwae, l1ei c:ornplltd whh the llwl of thla &amp;tete apo

plk:able to It and teeuthoftnd dllllng
ttlt CUITenl y..- to tnnMCI In lhll
atete 111 IQproprllte bustnen of In·
aurMCe . Ill llnMCial c:ondiUon Ia
lhown by lis ..,.,.. atattmeftt to
hM bttn • toUows on Dlctmblf

WELL - 'The Holter FamUy of BasiBn did weD
durlnr the deer hunting season. Gary Holter, top photo, 5 pctured with
I* sevm point buck and Gormn Holter and 1*1 son, Wesley, are
pictured wllh the 11 point buck baned by Gordon.

31,

1tl4:

Admitted

IU ,8.!.ti ,887.00;
I45 ,2CI,387 .00;

'•

',.,

14 POINT- Charlie Mugrage nailed this 14 point buck on his famt In
Melp County on the flnai day of the season. Mugrage and Ids sons,

meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publlshlntt Company / Multimedia, Inc. ,
Po!Tlfroy. Ohio 4S769 , Ph. 992· 21S6. ~­
cond.class postage paid at Pomeroy,

Ty!lln and TraviA are pictured with the ldD.

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R

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(SEAL!

Ohio.
Member: United Press International,

Jnland O.lly Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National

.
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The Gift
The Provoouive Scent
ofEPRIS' by Max facror

J.;.

Shadow Riche Collectitirt" .· '
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P.bLISHING PEN ~IT
· : · 'Ter~fti: lOr travel or
; ... ,' QUick IOUQh·upsl

BUMP BUMP LOCO ·

'

l3Ury your pencil ih this
!luy's nose. .and sharpen
up! His big .back has
a.icit 'of room to hold
·ni~~y :p~indls, pens
and other items that
,YOU want to keep totogether.

.

$8:·9
. . _, ,.

SALE ' . · ,.

.,

Ali s~t for the ,jn.va's)on!
This liattery· oP,e~~teci ··.
. clli' ·has headlf~~.t~ .anti
,. ftash :and moving', nia:!=hine
gun; Uses' Z ,·Af. '' batteries
(batteries not it1chided).

G,._,
r•~••'
Gilt

'

Battery operated , ~his ,
loco· has m'yster:y_ .
act ion. and a blinking "
funnel light. ' Uses
2 "AA" batteries
(batteries. not in- .
duded).
' ·; .

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·. .

$399 &lt;·.

$499.

$199

.
No. 44410

No. 43701

No. 40148

FRENCH CANDY DISH

Contemporary "flavor"
with a country look!
The entire set is stored
in a a ttra ctive wood
rack tliat either stands
or can be hung from
the wall, Each bottle
has a identification
label.

Made in France this
'lovely dish is divided
·into 3 compartments,
can be used not only
to serve candy or nuts
·in, but as a hors d'oeuvre
dish as well.

·: It

No. ZIZ99

'•

'·'
·.

"SPECIAL MOMENTS"
PHOTO ALBUM

I Z BOTILE SPICE RACK

'

When you catch thase
Specia · moments" on
film keep them safe
in this handsome photo
album to treasure forever. Holds I 12 photos
3!1 II )( sn.
11

$799

$199

REG. S9.99

No. 59384

6 ASSORTED
DIE CAST "MASTER

LARGE TRAIN

What goes clickety-clack
and has a smoke stack?
This train does. Ov er
211 .inches of track. It
has 1 locomot iv e, I
·
, 2 coaches,
curved tracks and
·a s.t raight tracks.
Uses 2 "D" siz.e batteries.
(Batteries not included).

Bump'n go ac ti on with
a flashing gun th a t has
a shooting sound and a
special mystery action.
Uses 2 C" ba tteri es
(batteri es not included).

.

New York. New York 10011 .

No. 44580

POSTMASI'ER: Send address changes

No.21 115

BATTERY OPERATED ROBOT

WARRIOR~

"Master Warrior"
next ruler of the
universe ! With
moveable arms
and legs. Each
wa.n-ier has his
own sword.
Collect 'them
all.

A CHRISTMAS MESSAGE•••••

Branham

Nf'wiPiper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

..... _.

N6el de i.:Oreal

"'

Surplut

8URANCE OF 0+-UO.

. ...

• ..•. ,_, ,.. '
... .

- --~

•1

Anela

WHEREOF, I t\he heftui'I!O tublcrlbtd mv n~mt tnd ceuMd mv ..., to t1t
alll11ed 11 Columbue, Ohio, thla day
tfld dale, Jutv 1, 11115. GEOAGE
F.t.BE, SUPERINTENDENT OF t~.

. '(

,,

lleblllllea

Autle S10;3BI•.t180.00 ; Cepltal
12,200,000 .00: IN WITNESS

.,,

_.,

Your choice of very loyely
flor al decorations on the
glass cover. Top lifts up
to show special grooves
for rings and eompartments for other jewelry.
Sections are fully lined

·~

11'
~
,.

hpencmuree 131 ,M7,17I.OO; Nit

'
afternoon, Monday

R~presentatlve .

0

COWlWICt.

OHIO, hereby cerllfle• thet
DEL.AW.t.AIE AMERICAN LIFE IN·

...
: .

No. 55907

Tho •*'-itnod, &amp;YPEAINTENOENT
Of INIIUAANCE 01' THE STATE OF

througll friday, Ill COOrt St., Po-

Advertlslng

· Add a touch of festivity
to your wardrobe at the
holiday time. Assorted
corsages that will never
wilt and have tt&gt; be
thrown out.

lSEAU

Dlvllloa ol Mlhl.....la. loe.
~very

CARDS

The most sensational
Christmas greeting
card of them all! A
perfect card for
everyone, Spread
joy with these
special musical
cards.

ITATI 01' OHIO, DIMIITIIINT 01'
INIUIIIANCI. C:ERTIFICATI Of

(IJS1'814J.. .)

Published

...

•

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II, 118....,.m; Income 133, 112•• .00;

~

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fSEA.L)

Mlltnl)' Sl 10. BrM11"- Gft'fll 6l1011
t.t.· ~ 11U1 83, Cenrnl Sl !I
Sourt.m lndiml fW. Wdlht St 'IS
11.1tlfftbrrR 73. Httdrtbf'r« &amp;I

The Daily Sentinel

•,

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C'rdan111r 1fD. P•lm 8Ndl Allan!lc 73
IUD Gra~~&amp;o IM. o.kllnd Ctry Rl

ot1n1urance . Itt fiMnelal CONI IliOn 11

GEORGE FABE, SUPERINTENDENT
OF INSURANCE OF OHIO.

(lilt Celete ....... ......

m. w~ 15 1011

;~

Te1m
G Fr Fl 1'111 Aw
!ioulh!Tn ................. ~ 152 ~ .162 1'J.4
North Gallla ......... .. ~ lfl 67 349 00.8

OhiO cage scores

()1(1rlll&gt;ttl

Stilt IPPilcaOft to lt and It authofiE·
~ durlno the current yew to t.......ct
In thlt tlllt Ill tppropritle butlnttt

.'

CORSAGE
.. .

'

The undlfllgned, SUPERINTENDENT

. htvt bMn u
31 , HI8C:

•. :

I

tNIURANCI, CERTIFICATE Of
COMPLWICI.

·.

.

'

'

HEDGE HOG ORGANIZER
WITH PENCIL SHARPENER

STATE OF OHtO, DEPARTMENT Of

shown byo Itt annu.l tttttmtnt lo

·.' Gallipolis,
Ohio
. ·.. ·
. . ·.·
.
. .
'

. .'.

786 N. Second S'reet
Middleport; 01\io ·.··
· ·· ·

364 ·Jacksoh Pike

11

'$ 1.99

No. 43613

to 'llle Dilly Senib1el, Ill Coort S!.,
Pomrroy, Oltlo ~7111.

ICE CREAM WATCHES

8UII8CRIPTION RATfll
ly Carrier or Motor Roatt

One Week ..... ........ ...................... $1.10
One Mooth ................................. $4.80
One
$57.20
!INGLI!COPY
PBICE
Dally .... .. ............................. ~ Cents

"TrY it- you'll like it".

y,., .................................

----·

,... ........ tAr

~.,

...............
.........
.,...Ill

mooth.

Malll!l_pl_

.-.OIIIo
13 w..u ............................... ... $14.56

26WeekJ ..... .... ...... ....... ..... ....... $29.12
52 w..u .................................. $58.24
·
o.&amp;llde Olllo
13 w..u .................................. $15.00
26 Weeko .... ................... ........ ... $31.20
52 w..u .................................. $119.80

DINING lOOM OilY.

.

Served with whipped potetoes. chtcken
pavy, cole slaw, hot roll. butter &amp; coffee.
Sorry, no substitutes ucept bevera&amp;e·wtth
additio~l pri~e.__
.

$3.25

CROW'S FAMIL·Y RESTAURANT
PH.

-

11~ 10c:wlil-::. '~
ff"llffMifll·Yf· lilA) IINI41
MIDGI.II'OIIT, 01110
•
•

,,.,,1., '' ()ettl/1

$ml~• P/11 ... A

Bruce Fisher

lillllower

.S299
'

Yummy pastel colored
watches with matching
straps! Ice cream design
on the watch face. Easy
for your kids to read.
Assorted c()lors.

Light up your life at the
holiday time! Festively
decorated, .brightly
· colored metal container
. holds a candle that will
brighten up th.eChristma~ and New ,,
Year time •

·out those aches
pains with this
:oW ,--Citlc·k· 'hand· massager
'o hwheells. When
· ln use makes
conversation

................
..............
...........
. ,.,.,..,.....
. ............
................
. . . . . . . . . . . '16

Subecrtben not dellrtng to paythe carrteor may remit in advance dlr.ct to
'fbe Dally Sentinel on al, &amp;or U month
b11il. Credit wilt be gtvon carrier each

No oublcrlpllons by mall permitted In
towna where home carrier service ls
avalllble.

DECORATOR CANDLE CAN

·:.HAND MASSAGER

.

'.
' I

$279

.99C
i

N~. 47,568'

REG. SJ,99

No. 49454

'·:

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

The Daily
Sentinel
.

'·

· .·.·. · ~Y · The Bend

..· .

Tuuday; December 17, 1986

The Daily Sentinel-Page-?

C PhlUp Mont• Inc. 19M

-

Tuesday, December 17, 1986

Page-&amp;

·, . ·

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TAG coordinator being sought

.

. Appllcatlol!s are being accepted cations may l)esenttoSupt. Riebel, · ship In tlx!OhloSch«ioiBoardsAssn.
by the Meigs Co\lntY Boai'd Suwm· ' E. Main St., Pomeroy, and anyone In 19Q&gt; and adJusted appropriations
tendeni of, Schools John o. Riebel. needing more lnfollDa!lon can call to correct employees use of sick
Sr., lor a t.iumted and gifted student 992-5592or 992-31183.
leave, perronalleave and vacation.
program coordinator.
MeetlnJl In reg~,~ Jar session this The boar(j trans(erred $:¥10from Ire
The three local school districts of week, the county board set Its speech therapist travel lund to tre
the county are joining In the expense organ!zatlonalmeetlngfor7p.m.oo Insurance fund and discussed tre
of employing the coordinator who Jan. 2and this wUl be followed by the posslbUity of hiring an Intern
will. establish the new program for regular January met:tlng. The psychologist. A school bus driver
talented and gifted students. Appll· board voted to continue member· certillcate was Issued to Anthony B.
Rllfle.

One wonders how anyone remov·
ing grave decoratims can live with
hlmselt. Anyone seeing such action
certainly should adv~ pollee.

six! said six! ldenWied 10 out of 13

and receives a
VCR for her efforts.
"First time In my life that I ever
won anything," says Genevieve.

Alfred UMW conducts nzeeting
Installation or af!lcers In a
candlelight service was conducted
by Marjorie Malone, Coolv!Ue, at
the annual Christmas dinner of the
Altred United Methodist Women
held at tre Altred Church.
Installed were Nellle Parker,
president; Gertrude RDblnson, vice
president; Martha Poole, secretary; Osle Mae Follrod, treasurer:
Thelma Henderson, secretary of
program resources: Martha Poole,
Gertrude RDblnson and Anna
Thompson, nomlnatbigcommlttee.
Mrs. MaiOne emphasized the missionary Ideals of UMW and presented each m~inber with the name
·r~ a mlssloniuy for special prayers
arid remembrances.
· MrS. _ Parker recognized the
birthdays of Genevieve Guthrie and
·Clara FollrOd, welcomed Charlotte
·Van Meter and Sa!ldra Wright, new
members, and Kate . and Ray .
fud&gt;havr, Green Acres, .Florida.
She thanked Martha. EUiot and
Nina Robinson for the decorations.
Mrs. Malone, former member of
the Atrens District oHicers' team,
asked tbe blessing. A birthday cake

VIctor Young, East Main St.,
Pomeroy, ts having a time d. lt.
Some seven weeks ago he was
working with a wheelbarrow at the
Young summer cottage and it lilt
his right leg. Everything seemed to
be okay, but finally he went to a
doctor and then to another doctor
but no mjljor problem could be
detected througll x-ra'y.
to Veterans

. ,the.- ~r·

was presented to Mrs. Guthrie and
Mrs. Follrod by Mrs. Guthrie's
daughter, Maxine Yost, Lancaster.
Christmas cards were signed for
Osle and Lee Henderson and for
Garner Grlt!ln woo wUl receive
Christmas gifts from the society,
and to Emma Lou Finch, Janet
Evans and June Stearns.
There was group singing of
Christmas carols with Florence
Ann Spencer at the plano to close

tlcenud
·;·Hearing _A,id. Specialist. ThuJSdey, December 19, 9:00·12:00
-noon ·only-u1ing modern el~t(Oflic equipment ..

ts:

,.

· · ., ·
:·· .. :.": _:_-. . .
,_ -..

. ~: · '· .

· . ·. .· . ' ..

·.·

~·.

'COME IN WITH
.· ..

.

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--

N FOR TEST

---~~---

.:· •.·.' :·

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. .

'Anyone who h11 trouble ~aririg or under~tandlng converution
11 invited to.havelfree liN ring t"t to 111 Itt he problem can be
-. helflllll Bring thl1 coupo~ · With you for your FREE HEARING
TEST ol.60 v1lue. Aduh1 only, Pl.. le.
. ·

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when diarrmiS m

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·.. ···
.

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· . ..Her ·Birthstone
-~

'
.

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.and
' .· .· Diamond.
.

..·-~ · ... .
'. ·,..

.'

.

'

· Whetl)er it's her birthday, a special
· •,. ·. · ·. occasion, or you just want ·to tell her how
· , .: · ·special she Is : .. thrill her.wlth her birth.. ·· . · storie s.urrounded by dazzling diamonds.

·.:.:. :.S11CJ9S

...
. . ...
..
. ... .. '.

· . ·

.. ·

··

·

RINQ OR

·

~NDANT

.

-.

r-;:::::::::::::::::::;::;::;::;::;::;:::::;::::::::=1

1·1

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

"IETTINO YOU THERE SAFELY"
LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
UGHT TRUCK TIRES
.
*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATED: MAIN ST., RUTLAND, OHIO
OPEN: 8·6 MON .-SAT.; 8·8 FRI.

PH. 742-3088 ·

Meatar Card and Viu Welcome

.
'·'
0

I

•

·. T~~ t~• ~in be -given by M;., H. William Mattingly, •

the program.
Others present were Clair Fol·
lrod, Clarence Henderson, Richard
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Millard
Swartz, Mr. and Mrs. Ton ScYoc,
WUIPoole,JamandJoshuaWrtght,
PamYostandAaron,alllocal,Beth
Cavlnee and Jessie, LaurelvUle.
· Next meeting wU1 be Jan. 21 with
Gertrude Robinson to have Ire
program on prayer and self-denial.

..' ......

"

ATTENTION RUTLAND

SUPE CABLE
IS HE E!!
. Installations are .beginning
this week in 'Rutland. To save
· S25.00 and receive Free
installation look for our note
on your~ door and come.to
our mobile van·at the
Rutland ·Civic Center.

r
' ·-

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Get.set to ~nioy America's .
favorite cable programming.

'.

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.

PACKAGE DISCOUNTS OFFERED

-

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Elrrlno• ilao available

SA VI $50.00 .·· ·.· ·

.. .

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.. .' ..
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bl~holonea onolr~lod

'. ·Jan.·Gainet ·
Juty-Aully
· · . . Fob.·Amythoat
. Aug •.Parldot
· Mor.·llquamarlne .May-Emarild
Jono+~oxondrlto
.' · Apr.·Diamond .

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• OPIN 11L I PJL

Furniture &amp;

'

by dlamon.da
Sopt.-Sapphlro
OCI.' Opal
~ov.·Topu

Deo.-Biut Zircon

•NASHVILLE
•USA
•DISNEY
•MTV

•HBO · •SHOWTIME
•CINEMA •ESPN
•TMC
. •WTBS
•WGN
•NICKELODEON
'

'

Kings: 10 mg "tar:• 0.8 mg nicotine 100'.: 12mg "t•r:· 0.9mg nicotine av.per cigerane by FTC method.

1' .~
1 •1r

'

PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

~

\&lt;&amp;~V price d' 2U~

lung Cancer. Heart Disease.
(mphysema. And May Complicate Pregnancy.

~ causes

· ''

•

Mfr's. suggested pricing basr1 on full-price brands.
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,

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. ,,J'·'

:SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking

'

·CONSOLIDATED
COMMUNICATIONS
GROUP
141 0 JEFFERSON BLVD.

•

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�Page-S- The Daily Sentinel

I

Tuesday, December 17, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-.

Qfg9fiizati()l1S
.
in
.
Meigs
area
conduct
recent
meeting
.
'. '·'
·.~~C:h · .

jJ ::-, ·: ·.-' .·. of ,Betty Bl$110p W.e&lt;!J!~ay qlgh~. .

•the speaker told ot her _life ~ a . meeting. .She !'i!Bd t~ Christmas CouncU, aml Esther Smith, CbeS- , ' Syracuse; Iva Shutts, Belle Prairie,
. ·v;:- .,, , .. .....-COUnC . .. ,: · ·The hall was, dei:or_ated for ' the· · teacher ·111 -an Indian boarding story !rom St: Luke1.!!!!d'theLord's ter, will handle arrangements for cooncU 269; Cora Beegle, Shirley
_.·~-~::Tol&gt;'~ i{ir'.niroy ·cblldren-·wm )lf · ; ..'season. There was a gift exchange , school J.11 PhoeniX, Ariz. where she Prayer and pl~e were given in the group trip to New York. The Beegle, Mary K.Holter, Thelma
.':,P~tl!(l J1l.a. p~s.!ona~ at tM ·i af~r which. •refreshments were has .taught for he past 10 yeafS. unison,
·
·spring district meeting was an- White, Marcia Keller, Lora Da~
.c'Sil~y· morning ·.service · bf tile.. ~ed. lly. ~ committee, Pauline After discussing the Indian culture,
For roll call members told what nounoed tor AprU '!I at the wood, Pauline ~denour, l'letcy
.~~Siicriiafleart Cln,Jrch:' ··: · ·
.. , • At!Ms, ShWln J~Well, Gloria she srowed slides of some of the · they like {llOst about ·Christmas. University Inn, Athens, at 12:30 Roush, Zelda Weber, Erma Cl~
)f£, 'J:fi~.
ro~!!&lt;ltiop ~as one o('· , Rtgg$;.Stella _AtkinS\ ·Ru)&gt;Y Diehl;; . chlliiren and their mothers. Utera- : Betty ~ · was ,'1-eported ill. . p.m. Alsci announced was the Jan. land, Helen WoU, Ellzilbeth Hay~,
,,several hOliday a()!Mt!es d!ScuSSe&lt;J.' · , Margaret, DOUg~ an~ ·F'I;ances · ture and.gl1t&amp;were displayed.
·Ofllcers' l'ei!Orts were given by •15 meeting tentatively scheduled to Dorothy Ritchie, state councUo~,
~ :; arlll&lt;:recent!U~tlng ofthe Sacred,: , AJklre,; : .
. . . . . ..
·. · .After l!te h1eel!ng," th~ ~~p held . Margatll\ Am!Jerger , and Gold!~ . be held at Belle r'ralrle 269 Council Chester Council 323, and a guest,
' Heart Parish Council held Monday ,·:
a sllpwer Jor th~t ~-Clementi S. · Frederick.· · Fruit baSkets were. _hall In Belpre for practice and to · MDlle Aspery, logan.
'
!light. Er.nerson lt~lghton prejl~ed- : 1 "
0
• Zunlngo,
pi!Stor of.. the church. prei'Bred tot.S~tlns-· Mrs. Newell : ~Jete plans for the spring rally .
l,a~. llle· :meeting· whiCh Jollow\.'1:1 :a' ' ...RU.tl1 Sinlth and.·Carm McCI~ri! · . - Relreshtnemts were servl!(l from a . ·c\lnducted a quiz ~bout santa with· .on March 15. The spring rally wm'.
. ,"'-' u
;ie~~~lngJ:)yS!ste!'Japet.'llwasootl!il' :- were top·loser's
the• ~!! when ' -' dei:otated table by Mrs. Clat- Mary.Haye5, wtnner,'.recetving a · be held at the Carleton SChool' bt
A party to reveat.secret pals WaS
· .. thatfolxl ~ad been ·sent t? the·West . '· _ll!lri~re\la qf Ma~on weighed In last·: : .:.vorthy.- Euvetta Bechtle, BU!y Jo . i!lft. Mrs. Ne\Yel! also gave each·.. Syracuse.
held by the Rutland Nazaren~
-: Vlrg\nl~' llood v'!c)!j'riS. Plans.w~re :··. week :RI!itm;r-up, .\lias . Bai'bata·~ ,.- .Kra~; · . and Twlla Child~- -member a ·crocheted mlntature _. • The district team for the rally and Church'·congregation in the River:. an noun~ tor~ pG~uc~ Chtjstriias;. · Va.r!an. At tJMi Five Points Class; · . Prayer closed the meeting' follow- Christmas boOtie ,-with a candy . state session which will be held In boat Room ri the Diamond Savings
"'II!U'\Y _.~o Jie h~ld ..at.5::vl.?"'Sunday - : {)lana· Herdrtuin lost the most ' ' lng comments by the pastor.
cane. .
.. · •
August ~~ Martetlli· was also and wan Co. recently. ·
· ' ll!l)t&gt;:W~ : liy a program · by the
weight and Paula Pickens was
For the Chr!Sdtmas program, the discussed at' the meeting.
The gtoup enjoyed food and
. cl\ildren.
runner-up. Changes In schedules
group sang carols, and each
Mlldred Schultz, deputy state games. Attending were Hanna E1·
The youth wUI sing at the 7· 30 Include the Mason class from
member had a Christmas reading. councllor ol. Logan Cooncll !W, Queen, Adrian A. Carson, Charles
·Christmas Eve service. A practiCe Thesday to Thursday of Christmas
Laura Mae Nice and Goldie gave the liesslngbefore the dinner. Barrett, D!lnna Grate, Wanda
for the children for !he Christmas and New Year's week. Five Points
The Christmas dinner and parfy Frederick served refrestunents. Esther Smith, president and deputy. Vining, Terri and Matthew Smith,
.Eve service Wlll take place on Dec. class will meet on Wednesday
Pauline Ridenour won the dOor of District 13, presided at the Sherrie Corey, and Christopher
22 following church with a pizza evenbtgs of both weeks.
:a~~~~~ ~~~~~an~% prize. Others attending were Opal meeting. The Lord's Prayer and Darst, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Rose,
• party and caroling at the Pomeroy
Hollon, Marcia Keller, Lora Dame- pledge to the nag were given In Tyson and Anson Rose, Goldie
Health Care Center to follow that.
Thesday at Crow's FamUy Restau· wood, Erma Clelaml, Ethel Orr, unison. For roll call members told Graham, Rita Smith.. Marlen~
rant. Grace was given by Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes, Mary Showalter, what they like best about Christ- Barrett, Charles and florence
The traditional holiday luncheon Annette Johnson, chaplain.
Sadie Trussell, Charlotte Grant, mas. Reports were given by Barrett, Lloyd and Fern Grimm,
Following the dinner, the group Co
Beeg
of the Afternoon Heath United went
to the home of Mrs. Florence
ra
le, Margaret Tuttle, Margaret Thttlet secretary, and Grace Welch, Sharon Black, Eva
. Neva Nicholson was mstalled as Methodist Church was held Thurs·
Mary
K.Holter,
Thebna White, Beulah Moyers, treasurer.
McKinney,LeafyChasteen,Shlrley
·Martha at the recent meeting of day at the church.
Richards. Games were played Do
under
the
direction
ol.
Mrs.
Johnson
rothy
Myers,
and
guests,
Fern
Favors
tor
the
dinner
were
Simmons,
Sharon Wise, Becky
Harnsonv1!le Chapter 255, Order of
Guests were welcoriled by the
Morris
and
Shirley
Beegle.
crocheted
boOk
markers
in•
cross
Jacks,
ChrissY
Taylor, Wanda
the Eastern Star. held at the president. Grace French read a
and ·Mrs. Lula Hampton. Gifts
form made by Eljzabeth Hayes, Gardner. Amber Gardner, Kenny
· masonic te:np!e.
Christmas story entitled "A Christ- were exchanged around a Ughted
Chester CouncU. Christmas arran· and Bev Baylor, and Brad, Debbie,
: · Bernice Hoffman was the instal- mas Gift" from Ideals. Members tree, and Mrs. Richards served a
dessert course. Mrs. Margaret
A trtp to New York to see the gements·dei:orated the tables.
Archie, Tyson, and Alison Rose,
~lng officer with Chester King
told of their nicest Christmases.
Bowles presided at the meeting. refurbished State of Uberty was
Attendln~ besides those named
Raymond J. Smith, Harold Carson,
• serving as marshall Karen FaceIt was reported that approxi- Next meeting will be held at the planned by the Daughters of were Loolse Roberts, Jessie Ryan,
Arthur L. M!Uer, Shirley Thmer,
_)cyer, worthy matron. and Larry mately $490 was made on the
homeo!RuthBrownofGalllpo!lsin
America,
District
Deputies
and
Golden
Glea~
Cooncil
269,
Ma·
Shirley
Smith, Bill Smith, Anna
..Well, worthy patron, presided at the holiday bazaaar. The children's
January.
Past Councilors Club of District U., rletta; Alberta Hartsho_m, Vern Wolfe, Fammle MDier, Grver C.
was announced for Dec. 22
during a ~tlng held recently In Householder, Betty Wolfe, Perry Oliver, Rev. and Mrs. Ford, Sandy
a canlllelight service to beheld
. A~ns- .
CouncU 283, ·Nfl\1' · Lexington;
McDaniel, Sharon Barr, George
. Ou-lstmas
·Eve.. The'.
'
. Lord's
'The meeting was in conjuootlon Mildred Lowery, Kathleen Trow- Queen, Wendell Greate, Vicki
· In . unison closed the :Past
. with the annual Christmas dinner bridge, Violet Darnell, Fa~Trow- Ferrell and Heather, Beulah Grate,
·
p,a~. and gift exchange held at the bridge, Logan Coun&lt;;il'IW;· Eileen
Herman Grate, Diane Young,
sup~rofthePast
.
-Western
Slzzlln'
Steak
House.
Clark,
Janice
I,.aw:ion,
Paull!Je'
.
Renee Young, Michelle Young, ana ·
of Chester Council
Hoselton,
Belle
Pra!rte
Morartty,
Gu!dlngStatCouncU
120,
Keith and Irene Kennedy.
Faye
of 'America, was
·· al · Ctow's Steak
Cleland giving
"

Tueeday, December 17, 1986

Business Services

z

!111

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

I

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

New Lima Rd.
Rutland

fiiut.
STREAK CAB CO~
107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.
6

t
t.

108 Vine St,
Gallipolis

742·2225 ar 742·2771

An 11Ullll c~ 111 e11 Is

·

2 LOCA110NS

446·9244

9:00 A.M. • 6:00 P.M. M1nday-Saturday

Han Your Trophy Mounted By A
Full Tlmt Taxldtrmilt

lh••
l

Ftl All YHII'I/Iflltl

PIUS: Off!co Suppli11
Furniluro, Wtdtting
and Graduation
Stallo":.I;.,Mognoti&lt;
Signs, I

We Wl•h All Our
Cultomer• AMerry
Chrllf11111 and AHappy
Mew Year!

lusilltss forms,
C•Pr Sorvius, Elt.
211 Mill St. Mid41.,..-t
104 Mulkry 1o•-· '•m•oy

992-3345

couqcilors

, . '.·

'

'

'

~ul)ty·
: ptoperw: transfers
. .

Do~~~:.MK:~!~:· :i!~~ci~ '~"~ih:~f ~:~:~~

Su~~~ Po:~

Choir program participants announced

.
Power Co.,
co. to Arthur Beeiie, '
.Sinclair, Paul Sinclair, .~le ~li!f- ., Charles EdWill Humphrey, VI· Rei. of Ease, Sutton.
·
·BUmgardner, Clarice Erwin, Ka-;
· clair, Joy Slncla!r, Dean Slriclah:h : vlan E. Humphrey to Monongahela
Ohlo Power Co. to J.D. West, ReL
The choir of the Middleport narrator. .
·
·
·
Po
·
·
Church
of
Christ
wUI
present
a
Choir
members
are
Mlk;lred
thryn Evans, Sharon Stewart,:
·L-yle. ~lriclail", . Vickie Bolen. Julia . '. wer· eo:. Right 0 ( Way, O!!ve.
Of E;ase, Sutton.
musical narrative of the Christmas Rll
Do
Roa
Be S
Debbie
Carder, altos; Glenn:
Bedford, . ' ·Jean I:.o_ulse Fr€Qer!ck, Orts L.
Ohio Power Co. to David Wayne
.
ey,
rothy
ch,
a teSinc lair, Cert. ofTrans'er,
'
story,"ForeverChr!stmas"onSun:
rt
T
!
H
k
J
C
Evans,
Mike
itewart, Des Jeffers;
~ ·Olan · U!e Hysell, .by mark, to · Frederick. to ~ean Louise Freder·
Grindstaff, Rei of Ease, Sutton.
wa • err oc man, oann o7
Paul
Brickle•.
tenors; and Denver·
GII~ LeeHyseU,:J;&gt;aulaKa)r HyseU; · !cl&lt;,_'Orls·Fred_er!ck, 35A, Chester
Ohio Power Co. to Lillian Proffitt, day at p.m. at the clmrch, Fifth nant, Mary In Wilcox, Peggy Brick.~ F,.3,'1.1'3 Rl2, &lt;;hester: . ·.
Claud J ..Dry, Dec. to Helen M. Roy Proffitt, Rei. of Ease, Sutton. and Main Streets, Middleport..-les, Debbie Howard, and Pam Ash, 1:t!ce, Earl McKinley, Mack Ste-:
·Terry .J;'ro!lltt, Pa!Jj!!Ia S_. prof, Dry, Cert. cit Transfer, O!!ve.
Michael L. M!ddleswart, Penny
Ron As)l Is director o( ~~- sopranos; Trudy Willl8ms, Mary wart and Dennis Hockman, bass. ;
The JXlblic is invited to attend.
P~· Wandling, . nl&lt;a, Peggy M!ddleswart to Michael L. Middles- narrative with Jennifer Sheets as· Ash, €indy Bumgardner, Sh!rley
fltt, to :Ronald Sy_kes, lJJts 12 &amp; 13,
·
148
pianist,
and
B!ll
McDaniel,
,!;!lbanon. , .
Stobart, Jerry Stobart to Arthur R. wart, Lot , Lebanon.
:Jerry L. TilliS, Darlene Tillis, 1o Kopczlnsky, Nada Kopczlnsky, S.4
Thurston Stone Jr. to People's
--Bryan L Lawrence, Wendy L. . T7 Rl4, SCipio.
Bank , of Pt. Pleasant, Sh~rlff's
''!'UIIs .. 0.52A 5.8 'fiN RJ4W, SCipio.
George W. Price, Mary F. Price deed, Middleport, Vill.
' Ella Borham, DeC., Jennln~ c. to ~rge W. Price, Mary F. Price,
Violet-Smith to Norman McCain,
. .
Mandee Scyoc was honored with hostesses served decorated Cakes, Dorothy Roblnson, Doris Dillinger,
Jett, Carol E. Jett; Aff!d,,Sutton
· Parcels' S29 &amp; ll T.3 Rll. Olive.
· 16.4A F3 T4 Rl2,-0range.
Thelma Henderson, Paige Wine~ ; _sarilh H. Owen, Richards. Owen ·
patrick H. O'Brien, Mary E.
Donald A. Maurer, Betty J. a lay~:~te shower Nov. :vl. Dorothy molded candies, and JXlnch.
to RichardS. Owen II, Elma Jean
O'Brten to Roberta c. O'Brten, S.3 ·. Maurer to Mark E. Meli, Joan V. caiaway, Charlotte Van Meter, and . · Others present were Tiffany brenner and Derlk, Alma Swartz,
F1orerire Ann Spencer were hos- ' ' Spencer, Marlene and Michelle San\fee Wright. Nancy Swartz,
Owen, Lot &amp; Part lJJt, Middleport.
T-2 R-13, Salisbury,
Mell, 0.14A S.JG, Sutton.
Larry J. Roush , Grace June
. Patrick H. O'Brien,. Mary E.
Barbara A. Lester to Earnest H. tesses. Cassie and Cindy Dillinger_:.. Donovan. Kathy Watson and Sta- Genevieve Guthrie, Icy Taylor.
and Florence Spencer won game , cle, Nellie Parker, Nina Rolinson,
sending gifts were lJJr! R!tdtie,
Roush to Robert Eugene Jacks, O'Brien I? Ro~r~ C: O'Brien; Lot · Lester. Pa~ls ~Int., Salem.
Donna Yvonne Jacks, Paroels SEc. ·, 299,T-2 R-13, Syracuse Vlll.
· Jerry L. Tillis, Darlene Tillis to prtzes. Janelle Ely and Sheila Kate Rodehaver, O!!Ie Folirod, Kathy Essman, and Charlene
12 T-2N R-13W, Che~ter.
Ohio Power Co. to Franklln Real ; Leadlng Creek Consv. D!st. , Right Spencer won the door prizes. The · Susan Pullins, MarUyn Robinson. Dillinger.
Barbara Swartz, Anna Thom!lSiln.
.: Clifford Longenette.' Ruth .Ann , Estate&gt;Rel. ,ofEase, Sutton.'
.~c. oCW!iY· Ease, Scipio
•
·'
.Longenette to ColumbUs ·&amp; sOuthOhio: Power. co, to Dale E. Hart, . . R. Craig , Mathews, Barbara
ern Ohio Elect. co., Right of Way, Kathryn Hart, Rei. of Ease, Sutton. ,': Mathews to Steven L. Story, Karen
Olive.
.
Ohio P,ower Co. to Ralph Ne!g)er,; ' l H. Story-, 3.98A F'l; Bedford.
W. Robert Couch, Isabelle · V. . Edna )'le!gler. Rei. ot F;ase,Sutton. : .JuoJ. Cremeans; Dec. akaJ.J . to
Couch to Charles v. Hannahs · . Ohio Power CO. toOtlnD.BOOthe:. ' Hedwig Teresa Cremeans, Aff!d.,
Mr. and Mrs CariCasterrerently Woodard before retumbtg home.
Larry Clark, Wendy and Penny.:
oma Starkey joined other rela- Middleport.
Rhonda R. Hannahs, .tpt 9.. Pam: ., Henrietta '{. Bootne, Rei. 'ot Ease,'-' 'M!ddlepof\. Vlll.
drove to Ocai:l, Fla., took bus to
:VDI. ,,
. · ., • ; ·
;. · Sutton.
·
,
.
Thelma !· Meadows to Ross Miami, and from there went on a tives at the homed her son-in·law
Tamara Lyons and son, Chrl$:
; Thj&gt;ml\s ~.'-Rose, M~ry. c, )tQse, ; • O~!o Power Co. to Franklin Real·. Junior Stewart, Gertrude Stewart, Caribbean cruise, stopping at Haiti and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Roy topher Nathan of Oklahoma ylslted
. to Paul M. Reed, Laurie 'F,. ~.~ . ·. E~te Co., Rei. of Ease, Sutton.
Tracts, Salisbury.
and St. Thomas. After returning til Wiseman In Albany for 'J'Itanksglv- her great-grandmother, Oma Star-:
p~rcels, M!dd. V!IL ·, · · . · .. • • , .'Ohio Power Co. to FrankiiJ! Reill _. Adrah F. Tewksbary, .Dec. to Florida t¥Y Wl!re l!'lests of trlends lng. Other$therewereMr.and.MrS. key, recently,
. ' Ralph · B. ·' Koffel. Regena : K. . •·. Estate Co., Rei. &lt;if Ease, Sutton.
George M. Tewksbary, Cert of and relatives InCluding Mrs. Wayne
' Koffel to Mon.ogahela Power Co, : ph!o Power Co. to Franklin Real ' Transfer, \lf!ddleport.
r--'---,_._....:....;.;'----'-------"'----;...;......:.______________;
·'rught 'of Way, Olive.
Estate.Co., Rei. of Ease, Sutton.
. Josepli' M. Fasano, M11rgaret c.
Ohio Power co to Maurice I;ott,· .
' Fasano to t-4onongahela Power Co , Rei, of Ease, -Sutton, : ,
·. . •
Rlght'ot Way, Olive.
Ohio Pliwer Co. Iii Roy Protr:ltt, "
)!~hen-Browning, Carla Brown- Lillian ' Pri!ff!tt, Re,!; ' ?f ' Ease,
ap~OtfigS
ing· to Monongahl:la
Power
Co.,
Sutton.
,
.
·:.
•'
.
•
.
,.
.
.
OrWlotoDaol~l"'"''c'"'""'D"t
,
~
lllCourtSI , hMtror. Ottro4S71t
.,..

Layette shower given Mandee Scyoc

Carpenter· community happenings
a

Carmel .
h · · '•·

,

~!ght of Way, Olive.. . , , . Ohio Power Co:.toOtiS ~· ,Knapp~·-., : Mr. 31'd Mrs. poyle Mrtttl and
.. RlcMrdBrownlng,,Maey Brown- . , Edlla L. Knapp, Rel. of EIISI!,-,'' famllyfromMai\StktiiiOh!o, WUma

·,·:'Homebuilders Class hai m:eeting·:· · ~Jc~.rft:n.a~!u~=~~:~ .

The Daily Sentinel

PHONE 992 ·2156

· · L~~~=====::::=====~=====--:-....:..--:-,
-

~ . Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

,, .
, ,
.
·
.
.• ,
.
. ··
Thallksgivlng w,eekend with Lula
".,. The Homebuilders C)ass of the :· chl-istmas' candy, bananas, ~tato .. Circle:· , · · ' '
,
·Middleport Church of Cbr!$1 he\lb · ··.c))fps,_and,!ce.cream were served,· '.· Mr: and Mrs. Brent Circle fi'Qm
SHERIFF'S SALE
Chr~tinas party at !he. &lt;4thens· · • ~epaFtY marked the begjpnlng · ' New ·Yorl&lt; · are vts!tillg ·. at the
public lucllon, oltho door of Slluo-.1 In Town i. Rongo 13
•
OF
REAL ESTATE
lhll ~rlhouM i1 Panwoy. Ohio Con1&gt;ony'o ·
· Ml!n~l Health Center TU~( : · of t,IE'lBth yeai' for the class toliOld · "DOUglas C,b:Cie : ho~.
· '
The Stole of Ohio
Ollloo In tho oltove 'tiling • port of' tho -ooty
-nlgbt. .
· ·.
;': ·, :., ,p'artlt&gt;S.' at the Cen,t er .. Asslst!Jig,at · Mr.and !'.Irs. tlooglas Circle, Melgo County
_CGUnty, on Ftldly, tho 171h ondoflotNo.308,inllecUp111
F!fty,f!ve pat!C!nts attended:. . '1\l~y's party were llel1v_!!r and ''Florence Circle were dinner guest Bonk Ono, Atliono. NA
dov ·"' Jlotultry. 1aae. ec ~ and 30, boundod llld
. Ptoiqllfl 1000 o'clodl A.M., tho fo~ • dliocrlbod ol followo:GameswereplayedwlthnUrnelyus . · Nora ' Rice, Coleen Van Meter, of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hager of • . ,
VI.
lowtng doocolbed .... - · tlegilnfllg Ill tho IOUihooot
prtzes,bei}lgaw:arded. Eac~ patient:·. Do~thY 'and. Norman Yeauger, Racine on Tha.q!vlng. .
Rldtolll E. Rtllllbum,et al. litullle In tbo Ccunty al Mtlgo of 'Albert ttwo~t• 1 lo~
.
Dlle(tdlnl ond 8 - al Ohio, and In tbo .... CI In It ~lilY
was given a special glftfrom.Silllta. · vacationing here from F'lort!la,
1\fr. and MrS. Larry Circle and
No. M: CV·2:1&gt;'
T~ f1l
ID·WII: .llowtlutt, • 280 Wt 1o tto
Denver lt!ce played cruftsWJliS : OY&lt;la AU~sworth, 'Dee Har.. . sons vts!tfld with Mr. and Mrs.
In pu_,.,. ol ., Ordor ol . lltu... tn ·~· T._: ...... al .......... """•
c_arols on his guitar and refresh·· Dana Swift, Reva Beach, Dorothy James Cundiff of Columbus, on Solo tn tho above . , _ • · Molp C!'unty. Ohio. 101111111ong ,,.
.,llid
ments of decorated cupcakes, Roach, Trudy and Casey WWJams. Thursday.
IC1Ion. I wiU offer tu .... 111
lnlk, 7e filii ....lit In I
. ,·
i
.

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_j

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'

'

Rosidentitl &amp; Commercial

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195

Wt MuJ AFill TIMt
lhp Ttehlelu
•• D•ty
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIAN(E

SALES &amp;SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50

EAST

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

FOI

PH. 992-7201

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes Built .
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801

or 949-2860
S~nday

8 miles

from
Pomeroy-Mason Brid&amp;e

•Live entertamment
' Free HBO •Restaurant
•Olymp1c Pool

•

115 IIICI ST.

Dealer

E••'•••••

F•r•
Pert• &amp; Ser•lee

•Reptlr

JOIN TEAFOID
12·tJ.l

mo

•Complete lemodelin1
*Room Additions

•Sid inc

COMPLETE LINE OF
FARM AND AUTO
BATTERIES

AGRI BOSS

12 VOLH VOLT

3 YEAR WARRANTY

992-5738

(hot,.,, Ololo

•Roofinc

·Battery Sale

CROCHETED
HATS
IN YOUR COLORS
Many Other Crafts
Available

•Sho• •Trophie.l

1·3·1fc

MIIC. Merchandisa

POMEROY

*GIIIJIS &amp; Pole

ll-5-1 mo.

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

317 North Se&lt;end
Ohio 45740

Buildtncs

MAICUM
CONTIACnNG
Lona Bottom, Ohio
Ph. 985-4141

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Also Carry
E[l,hln'g Supplies.

' .5"!1' ·- IUSINISS PHON!

ALL STEEL &amp;
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Sizes Start From 12'116'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'K6' Up
to 24'K36'
Insulated Dog Houses

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(6141 997-65SO

p~

PHONE

Frae Estimates
ID-17tfn

$3995

MGM Farm City
Service Station

Campltte Building
aNI

Contracting Service
(Free Estimates)

JEFF CIRCL£, SR.
long Bottom, Olio

PH. 949-2649

Roger _Hysell
Garage
linda L Riffle
IIAllOI
!lame Phon•

Rt. 124,Panteray

Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

992-3535 .

Also Transmission

ACIES WITH _,Ill£

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

HOME - Has bam, several
buildings, farm equlj).. pond,
20 ICies wooded. 5 acres
fenced $50,000.

3·24-tfc

THREE BEDROOM BliCK IN

WIGSVILLE -

Close

Awox 4 acres,

ITIJ-

kKchen, Ill baths, famiy
room basement. fenced lor

came or hooeS. 50's.

THIE BEDROOM HOlE IN

TOWN &amp; CDUN'IIY
VETEIINAIIAN
CUNIC

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All Mtht

•Waaherl •Diahwashers

•R1nge1
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
4 51 1&lt;

DENNY CONGO

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410

FILL DIRT

Loll Cottle -- Creb Creek
Rood oreo. Reword! Any
Information. name
"Cooper" . 304·876·1404
or 304-676-397B.

7

Yard Sala

----··Gaiiipoiis_____ ---·

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYL I ALUMINUM

MIIL-WIIl.·Ttt.n. 3·5 pm

CAll COLlECT•

PT. PUASAN1' OfFICE
305 Jack10n Awe.
I

1-2 pm

Ph. (6141 143-5425

11·12·2 me.

Moving Out of State Solo.
Furniture. oddo &amp; onda.
171h.18thl!o 191honly. 197
Kolton Rd

- Addon• and remodeling
- Roofmg llfld gutt•r work
- Concrete work
- Piumb•ng and 111ectrleal
WDrk

8

(free Eatimatttl)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
12 8 tic

GUN SHOOT

COl~

for tote modlil

Jim Mink Chev.·Oidl Inc.
Bill Gene Johnaon
614-446- 3872

Shotauns Only

9-30-tl

•
re·

core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992·2198

Middleport. Ohio
1·13-tfc

SIIIGIIY IY APPI.

PH. 304·675-2441

aND A.A CAll
lllllty Offkt
lorlloltn
.304·3 72· 5ro~ftfc

Wanted To Buy

clean used cera.

Factory Choke

Rff~Olll
We can repair and

RICK PEARSON AUCTIO·
NEER SERVICE . Ellalo,
farm. antiquo. llquldollon
aalea L1cenaed Ohio Md
Woot Vlrgtnlo 304· 3·
6785 or 304-n3-&amp;-430.

We poy

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Gauae

Indoor Floe Morkot. Every
Sot llo Sun. 8-6 Routoo 35
• 160.

9

Bashan Building

12

Public Sale
8s Auction

n

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

10·8-lfc

SUU A.-Al HOIIS

Paul E. Shockey, DVM

CARPENTER
SERVICE

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL

Complole Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of ott Typao
Worked In homo or01
20 yooro
"Freo Eollmateo"

Salvr4oy 10-11t3Q 11ft
LAIGI AII.Al I

\

Brown female dog loll In
Herrltonvllle area. ApproK
60 lbo. White olocklng f.,.l
and choot. Nornod Brown .
Cot1814-742-2324 or 814992·2810.

YOUNG'S

ICUT OUI FOR FUTURE UIEJ

EUGENE LONG

ro-

''

1121 17, 24, 31 . 3tc

LMt: btectc wollol, nylon.
Return contents. pi••••·
Conlolno fru~ money for
ochool. Loll between Mid·
dleporl ond Pomeroy. Colt
814-!192-3386. Gone Fink.

&amp; Vicinity

CIRCLE
CONTRAOING

OPEN 7 •DA YS AWEEK
6 A.ll. TO 11 P.ll.
PHONE 614·992·9932

Lost and Faund

Found: 81ectc female Dober·
mon . Colt 614-441-42411.

•

ONLY
ALL SIZES IN STOCK ·

WANTED TO BUY uoed
wood &amp; coal hetten .
SWAIN'S FURNITURE. 3rd.
&amp; Ohve St Gattlpollo. Coli
814 -446-3169 .
Went to buy, pipe or culvert
3·4 fl. diomoter. Colt 1114·
388 -9881 evonlngo.

TOP CASH paid lor '83
model and newer uaed Cl ra.
Smith Bulck-Ponlloc, 1911
Eollorn Avo .• Golllpollo. Colt
814-441-2282 .
Wonted to Buy: Sl.,dlrig
timber llo pulp wood. Conloci Alvin Johnoon 614·
367-7410.
Wonted:otd plonoo. Poylng
uo. &amp; t40 . uch . Flrotfloor
only. Write giving direction I.
Willen Plonoo. Box 1 88
Solllla Ohio. 43846. Phone
814·483-1605.
Pine polt and roH logo. F01
prlcoo or for lntormotlon ,
llop by 01 coli 814-11117·
6716. 8 10 I Monday tltru
Friday. Soturday 9 10 5.
Locoled Twp. Ad . 313[Aice
Run Rood) Tuppere Ptelno.

L----~~~~

Employ Ill e11 I

Giveaway

Racine, Oh.
614-843-5191

10·6-lfc

Buying Raw Fur Beef and
Doe• hldeo. SeUing · lrapplng
supplies. Wheot .,d nito
11111 . Georgo Buckley. 614684 -4781. Houro:12-9p.m.

One certKied Medical Technologilt. w•kdaya Send
reoume or 1ppty 10 Medico!
Ploze. 203 Jackoon Pike,
·
1
k
td
Goltlpollo,
Oh 46831.
WOO I 0 ,
6 pupptOI
mother port Hulkey. Colt 1 ------~814-448-2203 or 61 4-448· AVON Sott Avon poy Chrlll1836.
mao billo. Hmitod limo llart
up fee- FREE. Cat1814-4462 male klttena. Call after 3368 .
&amp;PM. 814-44$-7137.
!-------Looking for beeutician with
Chicken• he1vy breed ro 01• manager'allcenae Call814·
ter. Call 10AM dl 4PM. 446 -7090.
614-379-2144.
-------N"ded aomeone with back·
6 tomato pupllo give awey. hoo to open graveo al Ohio
Mother Reglotered Pit Butt. Volley Memory Garden• opprox. 60 oponlngo per yoer.
Coll614·992-3256.
Call 614-592-8151 collect
Bleck llo whMo klllono to give ror write P.O. Box 729,
Alhano. Oh 46701 .
oway. 614-992-6706.

4

Loll : Block Pit Bull,
Bulevillo·Addloon Rd. vicln·
lty Colt 814-367-0441 .

AT

STANDING TIMBER. AI
Tromm. Cell : 814-7422328.

I--------

6

OPEN 111URSDAY
THRU SUNDAY

Buying deity gold, oliver
coin1, rlng1, iewelry, 1t1rllng
were. old colna, large cur·
rency. Top pricea Ed. Bur·
kelt Barber Shop, 2nd. Avo.
Middleport. Oh. 814 -9923476.

Special Notice, 1ingteo.
St!l v1r.e s
meet that apecial per~nl
Call or write for application.
Peroonal Touch lnlroduc- 1--:-:--:--:-:-----llano. 304-744-4486, P. o 11 Help Wanted
Box 8638. Charteoton. W
Va. 25302.

Pupploo, mixed Go•mon Police ond Hull&lt;y, 304-8963480 •• oflor 6 :00 304·
676-3648 .

A.A.A.
304·675 ·~···

THE HAT RACK

•Custom Clubs
Youth Club1

Racine Gun Shoot oponIOred by Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday, beglnntng at
1 :00 p.m. Factory Choke 12
guage ahotguna

Point Ptoaoont Preobyterlon
Church Wilhal IO give o 60"
Roper range to an area
church. For dlilollu 304876-3223.

.. SINGLE S24.95

l/11/tln

•Ntw &amp; Prior Owned Clubl

SWEEPER and oew1ng ma·
chine repair, part1, and
oupptloo.
Pick up and
delivery, Davia Vacuum
Cleaner, one haH mile up
Georgoo Creok Ad. Colt
614-446-0284.

Reody lo go. 614-992·
8256.

IT. 62 SOUTH
POINT PLIASANI, W.VA.

Calls

..._ Gol ....... $6.00 0..

Announcements

4 puppiea to give awev

Now fll1os towt I I $2.10 •

Authoriztd.John Dlf!O,
New Holltnd, lush Hoc
Ftrm Equipment

154

CALL
446-4522

JIM CLIFFORD

lHl
KOUNTRY ,
.och~
KLUI
Golf
Equipment

~

RENT A CAR

DOZER. BACKHOE,
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER,
GAS 1!o SEWER UNES .
RECLAMAnON. PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
l!o DIRT

No

8-8-tfc

BOGGS

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
. INSULATION

•SATEUITE SALES &amp; SERVICE

WIRING NEEDS

r- 6t30·1J frl.

a.....,

~

11-26-1

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
J&gt;GtBSON REFRIGERATOR

~y room wHh fireplace, 2
baths, deck, carage. 50's.

Punih..:

contw

Flatwoodo ld, Co. Rd 26
2 Mi. from FIYI ,.itts
Watdt Fer Slgoo

•SYLVANIA

RUTlAND- Hts lar,e fam-

Public Notlca

HA•EY HANING
·IESIDENa

•ZENITH

FOR ALL YOUR

1.,".~

AlSO

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

h

:..'

CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp; PINE CONES
FOR WREATHS

312/tfn

i

11 -29-85 I mo pd

PRE-CUT TREES
AVAILABLE

Stamps,

J

PHONE 992 .. 7075

c,,,,. Q,n,,, Not ,,,,,

THE QUALin
PIINT SHOP

benefits· ·

monthly paycheck -- NO
LAYOFFS . Colt 304-6753950 or 1-800-642·3619

3

THE. TAXIDERMY SHOP

31

Help Wanted

BE A PART OFTHE NEIGH·
BORS HELPING NEIGHBORS TEAM I Join the Anny
Notionot Guard and you
have a good part-time

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist'

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213

11

'career ~· good

OES

Inzy · : B1' EDWARP SCIIIU:Cil; D.-o: . thing, alld thei'efore remain ·In- • d!laters are prescrtbed. These
fiated. They alSo can't extract · medications do mt cure the emphythe
. A¥1stMI Pl'oleMot ·
oxygen from the air as well as sema, but they open the air ways
li;Ji'llmlly Medlclne .
oonnalluags. '
somewhat, which tmpfoves the air
Ohlli'Unlversf$y College'.
Question:
What
causes
nowlnandootolthelungs.
«i OsteopathiC Medicine
Antibiotics are given If there's
Question: : My
wiD has emphysema?
Answer: Most clinicians and any sign of lnfectiOIJ. Some ~mphyJ;esearchers · think that chro~lc sema patients may.t;lke riledlclne
infections ani:! "U:rttatlons' In •the . to thin the extra jjxltum produced
bronchial tubes !lf air ways of .the · .by the disease, as weD. If the illness
l~ng&amp; 'cau~ ~!TlPhY~Il\a. Usually, . ln:'P,edes no~ill act!vlt:Y,, sucli as
these •' i'ilcifrr!ilg , in~ti:ins· . ·~e •CI"J$Sini, a room, or causes heart
call!led jly'etther ctiafett.e snioidrig-~: .'flilhire ·or· atfectMnental ~.
air polhitlon.
.. •; ~:\ .: ·theOOclornuiyrecommendoxy&amp;lin
WOrld.
UntO
the
last
'aJ
'
or
so
years, ~ therapy . .This Is, however, . a
bronchitis, It ·Is
i· ,·, ~!!SPcinstll,hi fQ~ about. 50,ooo dei!ths,. emphY&amp;;I!JTill w~ conflited mainly,__ controversial , and ex 114tDslve
"' .•··
" '
In · the United States and to men. But as more women.llave ·· treatment.
The best wasy to treat lung
.rl\ialslieart ·dJ!Iea!!e as ·a cause· o1. beCome smokers; !Mtr incidence&lt;{
disability. Indeed, emphysema emphy~ma has dramatically:)n- disease Is to prevent it. u YOli 'now
ranks thltd · among diseases for creased. A ty~cal emphysema ·: sri)oke, stop. u y-ou don't simk.i.
which Social Securtty gives dlsabU· v!ct!mhassmokedatleastmeJliiCk no)V, do1,1't star). ·
-ofcigarettesadayforalto25years.
!ty benefits.
·
Question: How Is emphysema
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
The term "emphyseina" comes
1
column. To submit questions, write
from .. the Greek . word meaning treated?
Answer! If smoking Is the cause . to Edward SChreck, D.O., Ohio
· "lnfiatlon." As the disease progresses, the lungs lose their ablllty of the emphysema, the doctor will · University College of O!!teopathtc
to shrink and expand with brm- ll!S!s~ the' victim stop !mmedlalety. Medicine, Grosvenor HaU, Athens,'
SOmetimes drugs called bronchial Ohio, 45701.

Buy

Television. Listeni~ Dev!ces
Computerized Heanng Atd Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

0

Afternoon circle

D' • d
·
IStnct eputles

Wanted To

r========~

Naz''"'e""e Church

Lewis Manley Aux.

9

...... .

toi

Sfrid •:ll
ere_ a
tot

The Daily

Ohio

library Duk Aa11aunt
Working knowildge of fie·
tlon. non-fiction and childrena book1, particularly current dlleo. Fomltlorlty with
baak: reference toola such 11
G1anger'o poetry Index. en.cyctopedioa, oltaoea. Who'a
who'o etc. Mull typo ICU·
roloty mtnlmJm of 26 wordo
per minute. Be able to run
16mm projector, photocopIer, microfiche reeder, 1a
and 35 mm mlcrofHm rood·
oro and prlntoro. Knowledge
of bulk melllng rate1 and
ntloo helpful. Knowledge of
A.L.A. tiling ruloo. Ability to
watt&lt; wllh the public under
vorioua condlllonJ. Ability to
work with and communicate
orolly and wrillon wllh 181·
tow emptoyMI ond ouparvlaor. Evonlng ond weoklnd
houru mJII. Slartlngoolory
oU4.80 par hour. Ability to
opirllle menu drtvan compuler progrom with two
flto1. U10 ol bor code wond
helpful. For appointment
celt 446· R EAO Boo11rd Ll·
brory. No Studonlo.
Government Jobo •16,040·
t69,230 yr. Now hiring
CoM B06-687·6000 Ext. R4562 for current fodorol 1111.
Children Jitter efter achool
Mon .-Fri. Middleport Elementary ereo . Call 614·9927644.
Cuatomer repraaentatlve, be
IIIOCilted With one Of the
leadera In Consumer Financial Sorvlceo. tmmedtoto opening for quoltfled lndlvlduol
Interested In c:ontumer fl ·
nenclal Mrvlce• Con1umer
losn1, home mortgeges. In·
surance •Ill. credit card1,
and general office admlnla·
tration. Succeuful Clndi·
date will be oe~- motlveted.
like challenging work. h1ve
good communlclllono okillo.
Intelligent, oggre11ive and
obto 10 oboorb ond apply
comprehenalve training pro·
w-ema to perform auccttl·
fully In credit, oeloo. cotloctiono ond odmlnlatrotion.
Competitive 11tory commensurate with experience
ond excellent benefllo. If
lntiiOIIed, colt 814-4482765 and ell&lt; for Mo.
Clolworthy for your career

Interview. Beneficial of
Ohio, Inc. of 416 2nd . Avo .,
OatllpoHo, Oh 46131 . Equal
Opportunity Employer M-F.
RN, port-limo. Sot llo Sun.,
Send reaume to BoK T6060, Care of Cloltlpollo
Dolly Tribune. 826 Third
Avo , Gattlpollo. Ohio
4&amp;631
Holiday Inn of Glll.polil now
accepting application• for
omploymont 11 rocept dook.
Typing. belle moth okltto.
communiclllon wllh public.
Apply In paroon. No phone
cat!oll
hoy A11embty Work!
teoo.oo per 1 oo Guoron·
teed payment . No
..porte nco-No 11111. Ootollo
send ltlf - eddreatad
ll•mpod envelope ELAN
VITAL-6847 341B Entorprloe Rd. Ft. Plorco, FL
33482.
E1sy Aaaem bly Work J
tBOO.OO per 100.Guorontood Pevmont. No
Experience-No &amp;oleo. Oelolto oond oolf·oddflllad
lllmped envelope: Elan Vi ·
Ill -715 3418 Enterprloe
Rd, fl. Pierce. FL 33462
ASK THE ARMY NA TIONAL GUARD RE ·
CRUITEA ABOUT VACAN·
CIES FOR QUALIFIED
PRIOR MILITARV SERVICE
INDIVIDUALS . Porl·llmo
lobo with fut! ·tlme beneftto.
Colt 304·876·3960 or 1·
800-642· 3619.
1 - - - - -- - Soml Driven Wonted. 2
yMro ov• rood ..penenca.
I yur ftat bod, 23 yoort or
older. Phone 304-273 9391 .

DISTRICT SALES REP.
needed by one of South's
largest, faltelt growning
home manufacturers Must
have a knowtedga of con·
llrucllon and packaged panollzed houoing Atao. financing and mortgage
bonking preferred. Send reoume .,d phone: Ken Cockerham. P .O Box 4908.
Mortlnovltlo, Vo . 24116 .

12

Situations
Went ad

Exptrlenced keyboard
player with own keyboard
wonting 10 join lop 40'etypa
or country rock band. Can
olio vocalize . Concoct Chrlo
Miller, 814-388 -9929 .
Voconcy. for the otderly 1n
our home. Trained and fif.
t•n y•ra ••perience. Call
814-992-7314.

18

Wanted

to

Do

Will do bllbyollllng in my
home 11 Quoit Craell . Colt
614-246-9134.
&amp;eoiMch window In ptollic.
Prev.. t heat loaa durmg the
co mlng wlnllf. BMI Slack,
814-992-2269.
Wilt do odd jobo
304-8711-2419.

Colt

Fin ;tl1i: iiil

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEV PUB·

Homes for Sala

In Middleport. 3 bed•oomo,
1 'h belho. corpellng, mod·
ern kitchen. dr1pert11. many
oxtrao. EC. Call 814-9926072 .
Why rent when you can own
thit 1 bedroom houn in

Pomeroy for UOOO.OO
cosh Coli 614·982-6871
eve1.
In Middleport. 1 'h llory
brick noor tmporlot Eloclrlc.
full beoomenl, olnglo 'car
goroge. cornilllol. F.A: ~te•t.
.18,000. Colt 814·74Z·
2027.
Exterior complete-1nterJOr
r11dy to complote. Alllirfi:k
on11gy efflclon1, lh•eo bed·
room ranchor, ollllng Q~­
acre. Priced on ln1P8Qt1Qn
onty Call 304·87&amp;-2981 ::..
Houoo 313 7th StrOll fl1,
Pleount . 88,000. Colt 304•
6711·4837.
.- .

.

8 room houae in town, ,ntc•
location, forced 1ir ft.lrn•cl;
Iorge lot. t32.600. Ownlll' .
financing ovottoblo 304•.
876· 1090.
. .. ' .

'

REPOSSESSED PR'Q9.•
ERTY FOR SALE, 1.,1_~ll·
ocro lot. public wolor. IIIIo
approved aewer ayatem. lm~
proved with fromo building
equipped for doy caro con·
tor. IIIII approved. PRICED
REDUCED. Thlo could bo
remolded Into on onroctlva
small home. 4 Iota on Sand
Hill Rood, 109x300 lOCh,
public wotor, oxc rolldentlot
areo. If lntoreoted we'll telk
price ond flnonclng. Buol·
neoo btdv.. gon11otlng exc
rate of return on laking
price Priced on illopoctlon,
we make loana. 8usln111
bldg, oxc tocotlon. good
polenllot Income propeny. lf
you nood o tocellon neor tho
courthou1e, thla one might
be choopar lhon renting.
Houoe locolod 1313 Vlond
St. olnglo fomlty or two
apartment houM. Prlctd to
oetl· we moka toon110 quelllying borrowo Coli: Loen
Dopl, Poopteo Bonk, 304·
678-1121. Mre. Northup or
Mr lewll

LISHING
recommondol
thot you CO.
do buolnooo
wllh :ii~~ii;~~;::=
paoplo you know. end NOT 32
to Mnd money through the
for Sale
moll until you have invelll· 1 -------~
filled the off11lng.

22

Monay to Loan

HOME OWNEAS-Roflnonco
10 low fix" roto. Uoo

M!UIIv 14•70 or..,woocl3bdr.,1Ya

for any purpo1e. LNder
Mortgage Co, 814-692·
3051 .

23

both, newly ,.modlilod. u~·
dorplnnlng, n11do flnloh ·
work. Rtducod 10 •7.BOO.
Coli 814-446-3040.
.,

Profanlonal
Service a

t 4x70 Fleetwood. 3 l,ldr.,
1'h bolho. Lolo of o•tlil.
Exlro Nicol Coli 814-251·
8587 01614-888-1887, .
•'
Plano Tuning. Lone Oonielo,
1975
Richwood
14x.O
614· 742-2951. Atoo: Be by
Grand Piano for Hte . Free partly turn .. wolftor. dryer.
oxc. cond. Coli 1114·448·
delivery and tuning .
4e61 01114·3117-0397.
Piano tuning 1nd rep1ir. tune
up ror the hotideyo. opeclot 1980 Liberty 14xB4, ':2
di1count. Ward' I Keyboard, bedroom. unfumlohed. vinyl
304-876- 5600 or 875- underpinning included .
llltull oelt Call 304·'7733824.
5873.
19711 Comeron mobllo
homo 12x60. 614-992 ,
6a24, 8:30 IO 4:30 Monday
lhru Friday.
·

Real Estate

...

31

Homes

for

Sala

1981 12x56 2 bedroOm
moblto homo. Excellent conBy owner. Mu11 Hll-moved. dltlon . Must Me to appre3 bdr. ranch. onocllge•ogo. cilia. 17,9g5 . Colt 814·
wetking dlllonco from North 992· 7278.
Gotlle High School. Reduced
lo $29.900 Coli 614· 388- MOBILE HOMES MOVED :
8711
lnaured, re..onable nltH.
Coli 304-576-2336
Smotl2 bedroom house, 6 1 - - - - - - -mllea oouth of Gatllpotlo. Double-wide on lot
Priced by owner for quick 1 OOK23&amp;. 3 bedroomo. II•·
ule. New wall to wall lng room, kltch,n,
carpe1, rural water. alectrlc *32,000.00 oleo extra iGI
end out building. From Gotll- 100K235 n2.a00 .00. 114
polit go down river on Rt. 7, Moplo St .. Mooon, W Va.
turn right on At. 218, then ofler 3 30 PM.
about 2 miles or flrrt ro1d
right to K1iner Ridge Rood, 1 1980 Liberty 14x64, 2 br
few hundred fe•t on Krlntr unfurnl1hed, vinyl und•r·
to flrtt hou1e on right. Call penning Included. Mull Salt.
304-773·6873
8 t 4-446· 2917

1- - - - -- - -

198B Vlnd1l1 12x60, eopondo. 3 bedroomo, 1 'h
bolho. outbuilding, on Iorge
rental lot, •s.ooo 00 oflor
6 .00 PM, call 304-876·
Boautifutly decorated 3 bdr. 3784,
home. new pluah carpeting
6 coordinating window 1973 Boron, 3 bedroom,
treatments. country oak upando, furnl1hed, new
bath, nice friendly neighbor- carpet. central air, all alec,
hood . Colt 614·288·6110 newly pelnted aidll 1nd
roof Sto•ogo building.
for further detlfll.
corn11 lot, •19,000.00 .
4 bedroom houoe for aotl, 304-773-6612
tlroploce. 3 mi. ooulh of
Gotllpollo, 832,500 . Coli Sm111 one bedroom mobile
doyo 614 -448-18111 01 home, very good cond,
priced ' to uti ull 11
nlghtl 614·441-1244.
$1.800 . 00 . 304 - 675 3 bd• ·· 1 \ol beth. fomlty 4164
room, 3Va mllea out St. Fit.
6881n Green Townohlp. Coli
Farms for Sala
614-266·6789 or 514-268- 33
6205
- - - - - -- Applo Grove 100 ocroa.
Government Honoo from t1 Iorge bem t20x28. I .30011
tU -repolrt . Aloo dotlquonl fronlogo on Jorry·a Run
lox property Colt 905-187- Rood, 6 miloo from Goo1000 Ext . GH-4662 for dyeor Ptont. Mlnorot righll.
Information.
Want offer~ Clyde ftowen,
Jl, 304 -678·2336 .
By owner . Remodeled 31 - - - - - -- .,-.
bedroom houae on At. 33. For aale or trade, feve ICrea
New F.A. furnace. large tot. of lond with wllor · ond
U3.000 Collect 614-423~~~~~~/slco reduced. ~~'
6289 .
3 bdr olory \ol , full boll·
mont, fuel oil hell, flreptoco,
1h
acre. Centen1rty, city
wetor Cetl614-4411-3044

b~d-1 =========

By owner. Slolely. 3
room houoo ot tO EE. St. In 34
Bu1ina11
Pomeroy. 6 wooded ICrll,
B lldl
fomlty room. dining room, 1 _ _ _ _u_ _ng
_•--~
F.A. hoal, 2 botho, booe- , .
mont, gorago . t27.000 .
Smott ongtnoo oeto llo rojN!It .
Colttot 614· 423·6289.
buoln••• In Mlddteport·.for ·
5 room houu near Pomeroy oete. Fof more tnlorm11~11 ·
for oete or rant. Coli 814· cell 614·992 ·8092 or 814·
992-3671 for oppolntmonl. 992·37&amp;2

�Pomeroy-Mi~leport,

. , . 1()- The Daily Sentinel
••
315

lota

lit

61

Aci'Mv-

Hounhold Oooda

Rofrlgorllor end o(eclrlc
- · oolld heovy plno trlplo
dre- • choll. Coli 114·
..... -71127.

Fonn for ule: no hauu, 2
bamo, county wololr·•llplic
lank. Col 114· 371·22. ..
.

Why PlY doul!le pric:e7 We
build blo 4 bdr . ~arty Amerl·
can Homao 118.111. !'!model · Coli 114-881·
7311 .

CountJy otylo cek furnltuN,
hond creflod ond llnlohed,
ontlqua reproductlono. Poul
Conkel, ' Rl . 7. Tuppora
Plolno.

&amp;4

T~JesdaY.

Ohio

Mlac . Merchandiae

December 17, 1986
73

KIT 'N' CARLVLI ®br

Vena

December 17

Ohio

S. 4 W.D .

Television
Viewing

1983 Ford ·E-n. FWD. 4 Z
1p.. E.C. 13400. 114-742·' ..
3013.
•"

BIG MOVING SALE. 1001
Slmpoon Ploco, -rylhlng
· living roorn. dining ·
raom. bed rootn lum"uro,
onllque Grondhthor'o
Clock . 304-178·31 08 .

~~~~~~~~~,·

1878 Ford 4 WD. mndord 4:.:

opood, good condhlon. Cell ··

114-192-3337 onyllmo.

RCA TV. 19 Inch. *110. All
channoto. worlco good. Got
now conoole lor Chrl•moo.
304-178-1848. •

; .:.

12/17/85

.~

£YENINO

19n Ford Chollou E•1110•• •
window von, 304-882 -' '
3381 oflor 5:00PM .
'

2.9 acreo, oil utlhleo -rby,
on Rt. 114. Call 114-317·

74

0213.

154
41

Hou1e1 for Rent

Ranch otylo, nlco 2 bdr.
homo, 2· full balhl, 'AI bl.

~ \· .....: . .. , ...

'loll"""t-

,z.,,

(

1

:

from Wuh. Etam., •321,

()!.. ,.,,. ,.,. ....

2":ss~1q .

"Back to our sponsor in just '

con

814 441
'
•

Fumlohed houoo. 241 Jock·
eon Plko; Golllpollo. 1200

wei• pold, 2 bdr. Coli

-

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

Flr-ood-cutup olobo. 1
bUck food 1100. 2· 1180.
Pickup lood, you houl 111 .
' HEAP ocooplod. Coli 114·
~2:-41_·_11_B_D4_._ _-:--:--

Pitt Bull pupplot I wooko,

·== I-:8~1-H::-:-ou-.e-:h-ol-:d-::-:0:-ooct--:-,

E~

eonege, tii.OO

upo~~n u~ .,. ..

...,polld. oN lllllllleo p.kt, no
chMdren, no polo. Colle1.4441-1137.'
.
Two badroom hauulor- F1Anloloeil -'· 2 bdr.. 131'Ao
In Jorlcho - · Coli 304- 4111, GolllpoMo, 11 II 175·8483 oltor I PM .
pold. Coli 4411-4411 ?PM . '
Lorge hauoo end oportrnont,
unfurnlohod . 304 -171- 740'Ao lieoond AVo. 3 bdr.,
1315.
1110 mo .. dop. noqu-.
Coli 114·4fl·4222 bo·
Smoll houoo noor . _ HAl
School, 304-171-1900.
Otluxo 2 bilr. 'downtown,
Two bedroom hou••· ooonploM kitchen, ol carpet,
dryer, okeulc hoot
1110.00. dopoolt 110.00. awoohor,
AC. Dop. ...,__ Coli
304-171-3811.
doro 114-441-4313. - · .
114-441-0138.
-

weok, utHitloo peld, pMM
304-171-3100 or 171·
1109.

-•••·

42 Mobile Home•
for Rent

Furnlohed lpt.. 4 roomo •
both, no poll, odullo. Avoh·
ble Dac. 1. Coli 114-4411111.
Lorge I room upolon opl.,

..

SWAIN
AUCl:fON • , FURNITURE
12 Oflire'St., Go!llpollo. N•.....tWOod-cO.III...... I
pc wood LR oultt 1311,
...,.. 1111, ontron
.......,_ til, (1111" a uud
bedroom oult'". ren1101.
wrlngor w - . • ohooo.
Now llvlngroom ,a ultoo
1198-11181, lompo, oloo
buying cool I wood oloveo.
Coli 814-441-3158.
1 --:--~·_:...
' - -- LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sot.o ond choln prlcorlfrom
Ull. to IIH. febloo. 110
and up to 11211. Hlclo-1boda,UIO . ond up to
eno.. .... bod• 1141.
Roclinoro, 1225. to 13711.,
Lornpo from 121. "' 11211.
pc. ~from 1109., to
431. 7 pe. 11 II ond up .
Wood- with olx cholro
1211 to 17411 . Dllk •110
up to 1228. Hutchoo, 111110.
llunk bed ccmplelo with
m o - . 1278. ond up to
13811. • ...... bedo. 1110.
Mon ...... or bo• oprtnga,
full or twin, . .3 .. fifm.
end 183. 0uoon Ull, t2ZI.
4 dr. cholla, 149. I dr.
choeto, Ill . Bed frornoo,
120.end 128.,10 ~n- Gun
c . o -. *310. Gao or
olectrle rongn 1375. lloby
1111tt-. Ul • 1311, bod
tro- no. 121. • 130,
king lrarno 110. Good •••·
lion of bedroom oulteo.

Fumlohed, AC. coblo, no city fumlohod kllchon, e200 mo.
teaH, boautlfulrlver vlow In pluo · 238 111. Ave.
Kenougo. Fottora Mobl.. 1111. a dop, no polo. CoH
Homo Pork. Call 814-448· 114·441·4121.
1102.
1- - - - - -- 1 r - • bath. Loc3 bdr . mobile homo, eH Crown City . "-wly, . . _
utlltleo pold, no polo, - · roled, ....lrie IIOVO a refrlg.
dop .. 142Smo.lnodvenoo. 2 No polo. Cell 814· 211·
bdr. mobllo homo oil utMtleo 1222.
pold. no p i l l -. dop. 1 3 4 1 1 1 - - - - - - - -,-pold lnoctvon.o. Coli 81 4· Fum . opl. for rent, u t 448· 1388 oltor &amp;PM .
pold. ezn mo. Col IAMIPM. 814·441·1244.
2 bdr. fully furnlohod.
rocken. metel ct~blnets ,
12dl. conv . locotlon. Fumlohedopt. l204thAve., -boordo 131
up to
Uppor Rluor Rd .• wotor pold, Golllpolja. ono bdr .. 1210, Ill.
ooc . dop. Nqulrod. Cell
pold, oduflo, Col
uooo • o•ouohuo
814-446· 8688 .
441-4411 o1tor ?PM.
UUd Fumlturo .. Drtuor,
bad. moto1 oflleo dolko. 3
2 bdr. mobllo homo Mlr 1 · 2 bdr. opt fumlohod, oil mAlo
out lulovlll Rd. Opon
HMC. no polo. 1111 rno.. utlltloo pold, no poto, - · 11om to lpm, Mon. lhN 111.
wotor included. 110 dop. dop. nonl t380 mo. Plld 114-441-0322
call 814-441-3817.
. . . - . .• . eon 814-'-4111311-IPM.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
2 bdr . unfurn . 12x80,1 - - -- - - - ---'W.ohor6, dryOtO, rolrlgoro·
woohor &amp; dryor hookup. 'AI Uflllolrw fum , opto. :IMn. no
........ lllltlllo Ap'mile poll HMC on Fit. 35. polo, odulll, utlllloo pold. tora.
pllonooo, u - Rl¥or Rd.
Coil 614-1411-4389 or 304· R.r . • dop. - -· Coli boolclo I - CNII MDIII.
875-9710 .
114·441·11111.
114-441·73111.
Nico 2 bdr, mobilo homo Nice 2 bdr opt, 4 rnlleo from
fum .. convenillnt locatiOn Oolllpollo, ltvve. refrla.. • County Appllonco. Inc.
on Rt. 7, wotor pold. Coli w11tor fumlohod. , 1200 mo. Good ueod -llonooo end
TV-· Opon lAM to 8PM.
114-246-6818.
No Poto. Cel 814·448- Mon lhru lot. 11 4-4418038.
l l l l, 127 3rd. Avo. Golll·
3 bdr. mobile homofor,.,.t.
polla, OH .
Coil 614·441·4283.
Modom 1 bdr ept, convonlontlocellon,.no poll, lee. Yollrf Fumlturw. now •
2 bdr. 1150 mo . pluo dap. Dop. • Roforonooo. Coli
uud. Llfllo 11011on of qualColl614-378-2435.
114-441-20111- 2prn.
Ity furnlturo . 1211 hllorn
2 bedroom mobllo homo 2 bedroom oportrnonto. Ave .. GoiUpollo.
nur Roclno . 114 -992 · N- Hoven, WVo. Nowly
E·Z Cnodlt Mollohan Furni5818.
romodoled. In town. 114· ture, lit. 7 Nortll of Golllpo992-7411 .
'
llo. Coli 114-448-7444.
2 bedroom troilor 12xll.
' Atoo efficiency opt. loth EHonelency opoltrnent. 2
locelod on Flcuoh Llno. roomo, bath, fuH taaeomonl. lion- woohor-dryor Ill
Choohiro, Oh. 304-773- Furnlohod . In Pom1roy 12110. lplfd Oueon
wo~hor- dryor oot 12110,
5828.
obovo K._.. 114·112· h•evy duty Frlgodolro
1211 or 114-9i2-7314. . woohor 1121. Ke,.moro
3 bedroom. furni1hi d.
Wa1h1r, dryer. 1wnlng. Fumlohod 1 boclfoom opt. ........ e1ze. G.E . wooher
1¥DD.d0 .,...n •110, Keft.
1200. pluo dopolllt No polo. OoPDolt NCIU-. . . . . d(yor ........ 11.....
utHitloa. No polo. Coli 114- 814-182-2U7.
IN, oklo by oldo rofrlgorotor
992-7479.
otr
llko- uze.
I room uftfurnlohod lpt. CoH
2 bedroom. ponlolly fur· 114-992-&amp;4a.or 304·812· 11frii81'P whlto 198, rolrll ... troll !roo
nlohod. 11711pormonlhpkoo 21111.
11110, •olrlgoroiDr
110 dopoiit. Colll14-9112·
- .121,
.
2384.
APARTMENTI. mobllo -orotorfnllt
white .... wood
homoa. hou-. Pt. Ploount cool burning- 1175, 30
2 bl troller In Pt. Ploo11nl end Galllpollo. 114-441- ln. 1100 111t91 ·•71. lkoggo
0- . 6150 dopoolt; 1200. 1221.
Appllen ..o, Uppor Rlvtr
per month . 304-171-1843
Rd.. Gollpolla. 114-4412 br opo-ta In Hendor- 7311.
or 175·11714.
•
oon . 304-871·1172.
2 br lroHfr In Pt. Ploo..nt
Montgomery Word dlo·
· 1110 depooll: •aoo. Ntco· 1 ond 2 br epor1monll hwethor. lito ..W. Horvlll
por moftlh. 304·171·11143 downtown. 304-171-2211 gold wood Jl'eln top.
• B· l
or 871·1714.
Coli 114·311· DZ3.

•n.

ut-

a

a

tot:

opp::\

... ,. ·-· ,_ . ..

"~

·-

.

,.

-

!:h'

llulldlng Motorlolo
l!lock. brlek.- plpoa,
wlndowo. llntola, etc .
C!oudo Wlntoro. Rio Orondo.
0. Colll14-245-11121 .
Kontucky Lump. ~hlo Lump,
Ohio Stoker. Yard or dollv·
ory, oornont bloclla tnd
building moterlol. Galllpolla
Block Co., Pint St., Oolllpo·
llo. Ohio Coli 114-448·
2783 .
Block, brick, monor ond
mooonry oupploo. Mountoln
Sllto Block, Rt . 33, Now
Haven, W. Yo. 304·182·
2222.
BuMdlng oupplleo, 1300) 4x4
inch 12to 1111. oekllmboN.
Mor110n'o Woodlewn Form.
301·178·1211 or 304·62311843 ovenlngo.
68

Peta for Sale

Brlorpoteh Konnalo Allbrood grooming: Adu"• 6
~uppleo. Englloh Cocker
Sponlolo. 3BB-97 9 0 .

Flnrwood, herdwood, opl", purt bnud puraloo, I mo.
llackod end doMuorod. A
·vory ' - lood. 131. Coli coil . I 14 . 8 I. 9 ee 1
514-448-7983 or 814-441- _..,_.,_m_a_•_
· - - -- 1
81311 ·
AKC Rog. mlnloture DochF " - d 115 pickup lood . lhund fomole, block lion 3
A* for Howord, 11 4 •317• moo. old. Call 114-882~11.
sn1 .
'·-'
I
M,...,
hardwood alobo. 12 ·
por bundlo, contolnlng oppro•. 1'AI ton, fob: Ohla
Pillet Co .. Pomoroy. Ohio.
Phono 114·192-8411 .
Wood. 140.00 • · ton . Aecoptlng hilt vouchoro. 8 1 4.
742·2418.
Firewood. oil hordwcod.
131. dotlvorod or 121., you
pick up. HEAP ecooplod .
Call 114-981-3117.
I ton cling tlmbor. hordwood
a pino. Rlchord lolloy-114982-3881.
Frool froo whlto frlgodolre,ISO, oloo mon'o 28"
10 - d b.o. now, US.
Calll14-742·2910.
1 nino Inch Rockwotl llble
- · 1 tool box for mini
pick-up . Call 114-992·
1229 oltor 11:00.
•
TONY' 8 GU N R EP,IRS,
hot dip rebluotng, olllypoo of
gunomlth wcrlc, t.ll •rvlco,
304-1711-4631 ,

Uvo Toddy

ll4iln: AKC
R~glllorod Chow C~ow
puppioo. Roody for Chriol·
moo. Colll14-211-1271 .
AKC whllo 14 moo. old
temolo Toy Poodle. Wolgho
oppro•. 41 lbo. Oood whh
children, houoo brokol150.
Coli 114-448-7411.
AKC Rog . Oobarman pupploo, 8 wh. old, 2 block
mole, 1 rod mole. Coli
114-441-n9&amp;.
AKC Rog . Lloo Apoo pupplot. Rudy In tlmo for
Chrlstm11. One male, two
tomato . Coli 1114-441 l-0~70_1_.- -- -- AKC
II d B I
ooa "·
rag 1 oro
Flold Chomplon oirod. From
9 montho to ~ yooro old.
Slow to modlum opood.
_1_1_4_
· 9_4_9_·2_5_4_3_
. --1
AKC Lhosa Apoo · pupo,
molea only. 20 chomplonaln
podleroo, gefttle, qulot ond
loving dogo. 304·1711· 5837
orll?l-2223 . "to -uollto
lvoo uo".

Lump houoo cool. Nmollone,
grovol. oond dollvorod, ono Porokeeta, bablel, broodan.
CeM ehor 11:00 304Ion on d up. Jl m Lo nlo r, cor.•·
• 030
1
7
304-171-7397 or 175- 1 _ _. _··--·--- - 1247,
,.
AKC regiettred Otrmen

Far Solo. SURPLUS, CARHART, ARMY. DENIM
CLOTHING. lnoultlod Do-

cron cover1ll1 cemouftaaed
130. (Oron111 or groon *21),
11om SomllllfYIIIo' o Eoll Rovenowood, Wvo .. Fri .. Sol.,
Sun. 1:00-7:00 PM . lothor
ovenlngo ahor IPM) Cloud
Soturdoy Oec. 14, Sundey
1 8. (Kido Cemouflogo) Oo·
livery 304-175-3334.

Shepherd pupa 1100. ooch.
304-176-1143.
AKC Bolton Torrlor pupploo,
Nldy by Chrlotmoo. Coli
304-175-3812 eftor 6:00
Rat Torrior Pupploo. 3041711·1806.
Ono voor old lomolo reglotorod Boogie , 304-8767837 .

1=:::=:::::=====

Cobbogo Polch dollo. 2- Mr.
T Dono. Coli 304-175· 57
Muaical
6480
·
Instruments
Spaclouo room dlvldor, 11 1- - - - -- -- gun coblnot. Solid dork
wolnul. Both llko now. Coli Glboon Dovo guher FG-78
304·178-4338.
Yornoho gulter, Koy five
llrlng bongo. Coii514·448Uood J-20 Dhch Witch .839.
T"'"chor end 4110 John
Doore Oozor, 1-814·194- Wurtltzor Splnol plano, top
7842 or 814·6008.
cond.. prlcod to 1111. Coli
114-:448-8110.
GE oldo·by·oldo doublo door 1-__;_______
froll !roo refrlgorotor. whho. Klmbolleonoole plono oxcol1300. Eac. Cond. 304·675· lont condhlon, UOO. Coli
7471.
114-441-4203.

1------ ---

Cool for Alo. Lump, llokor,
ogg . Plckod up or dotlvorod .
1114·441·9200.
II' projector TV ocreon, moda
by Ad..m. Eao. cond. Plrfoct picture. Muotull 1100.
304-171-7478.
Antiquo pow. 304· 175·
21311.
Moving, picnic toble with
urnbrefte. ltwn mo-. grift,
golf olubo. hldo • bod, ..,d
llblo. rnloo; 304·1711-8183.

t;IIH dlomond clull• ring,
7 , 140.00. Cell 304·
,171·11721.
Gym Pic pluo, uc cond,
rnoko off'er, phono 304-171·
2771.

1- - - - - -

~II lrodo o 1 970 12x60
trollor In folr cond., fora PO. 1 978 Oldornobilo Sllr Fire,
1978.upwhhlowmlloi!IO ex. cond ., no ruot. Call
• goodcond. Coll814 ·367· 1114-441· 9419.
0312.
1 - - - - - - : - : -- -:
1881 Ootoun 110 Moxlmo 4
door. auto . trent, elr,
fMII' Suppl11:'
loodod. w"h olllho opllono,
ox. cond. c•n &amp;14-448&amp; Li Vl::.li'l h
1107.

1- - - - -- - -

Boldwln Ovonure Orgon Fun
Moc~lno Sorloo U ,OOO.
304·171·28111.

1:;;;:::=;::;:==
58
Fruit
•· Vegeteblea
"'
Big al11 oppleo mountoln

grown, light verlolloo. Truck
lood. orongoo, Novel, Ton...
loo, Gropoo. llonenoo. Opon
7 doyo, 1 :00 to II :00. Jock' a
Fruh Mkl, Rt. ~~~. Hondor·
oon.

-' '

814-211-11417.

- - ---.

61

Farm Equipment

a

-doro.

a

.eoo.

1170 GT drvor 1100 bu. ox:.
cond. 14,200. 18 HP Doutz
troctor 4WD *10,1100. 100
HP Deutz 4WD 113,000.
Morgon'o Woodlewn Form.
304-875-1281 or 304-823IB43.
M11ooy Forguoon 2118 dloool
tncotr, 11,991. Sldora
Equlpmonl, 304· 878· 7421 .
1980 Molloy Forguoon
troctor, PS, opln out-lo,
locking dlforenlll, 1100 hro,
17.000.00 . Phono 304,
678·2147.

63

Livestock

2 Reg. Sorrell quarter
moreo, 1 8 mo. old quoner
colt. Coli 814-281-1822.
Two 4-H horooo for ulo.
both boon lhown • dono
woll . Roooonobly priced .
Call 814-388· 9919.
Moro • colt for oolo. Coli
114· 388-90711.
2 Flog, Anguo buill, onHIdol. porformonoo tollod, 8
moo. old, 110 conlo 1 pound,
rool nice. Coil 304·1752902 ohor e.
84

Hay

S.

Grain

Hoy for Alo. Coli 114-3792424,
Lorge round bolaa of hoy 120
oo. Coll114· 445-1012oflor
5PM.
Mlxod hay for aoto. 11 .00
per bale. Floblnoon Forma
614·9815· 3829 .

I r .111s IJIIr 1.11111 'I
71

Autoa for Sale
'

1977 Pinto wogon, Ctlllor·
nlll Clr no ruat. new t1re1.
Coli 114-281-11122.
1972 VW Supor Bootie,
Hondo ATC 1811. both good
cond., 11100 ooch. Coli
814-281-1380 ohor

e.

1981 Monto Corlo loodod,
43,000 mlleo. Call 814·
211· 1444 or 304-871·
1328.
84 Ford Tompo GL 4D,
26,000 mllll, IUID, otr,
AM-FM PI, Pl. Cell 114241· 9181 or 114· 241·
8131 '

.

"'

. .

72

Trucks for Sale

1972 GMC tiUck Y-8, PI,
PB, long wldo bod. prle&lt;o
UIIO. Coli 304-468·1997.
1979GMCBh. llld,toppor,
301, dual oxhoull. auto..
low mlleo, oxtrool Coli 114·
441·0073. evo. 114-44829111 .

IJBGBU;Fe5'1'6R SO~~

I'v~ JU;,T 'ilf,1Ji$D

!m, 61JT I
THI~K

OH, r

./n"&gt;•I'T

~w

1'/ii:At-IT-s,

l c:Ql'T I&lt;NOO 'IOU.

Hl;'S A

~I&lt;FUL
MA~.

1973 VW Supor Bootlo good
cond . Caiii14·4411-302B .

CROSS. SONS
1883 Plymouth Turlomo,
U S 31 W0 II J k.. n 2 .2. II opel; 42,000 mlloa.
• · ·
'
oc
•· Cell 114·448-7414 ofllr
Ohio.
614·281·8411.
Molloy Forguoon, N- Hoi· _4_p_m_·- - -- - - : : - 1
lond, 8uoh Hog Boleo a Plymoulll Volloftt Seem~.
Sorvlco. Ovor 40 uood trtc10,. to choo• lrqm 1
V-8,2door,318motor, A •
oomplotollno of now• uood PS , rodlal tlreo. rodlo. Coli
_ 9_8_·_ _ _
oqulpmont. Llr11011 ooloc· _1_ 14_·_24_8_·91
1
lion In S .E. Ohla.
. 1 9B 5 Codlllec Oovlllo . 4
Jlvldono Form Equlpmont, door, ccrnpletoly equipped,
Yoor End Solo whh II porconl exi:ollont condldon, froM
ln11r11t. long Trectors. wheol drivo. 114,000. Coli
Groin llomo,
full llno of 814-991-3188 arl14-986Agr : Equlp. Comploto llnoof 31184.
Yormoor Hoy Equip., Round
Bolo foodon, 178 .00. 79 Codllloc Floolwood
Grlndor rnlaora, 3 pi: hllch llloYgllom 1 o - . good
n&gt;llry tlllen. 11 h. to,d cond. block brown rnotolic
bUnko •110 .. poll Drlvor wllh loother lntorlor. Soo 11
1710. B HP Woodopllllora ,3 2 Worwlck Rd., prlco
1950., Chock our prlcoo on U , IOO. Cell 304-178gotoa 6 Correl penolo, 21114 oflor 7PM.
pickup rocko,
min·
oral foodero, w..ol horeo . '78 Buick Lo Sobrt, runo
lawn mowe r •. wood oxtro good • . cl11n lnolde,
burnoro, freoolln41ng, flrt- 304-891· 3110.
ploco lnOOtto • furnace
'114 llulck, 4 door, hord.lop,
odd· ono. Good •loetlon of 70,000
mlleo, very aood
uood trocton
olho&lt; LIIOd
cond, 1810.00. Phono 304·
equip. Coli 114.-448-18711.
878-2147.
131 Mooooy Forguoon troc·
tor runt good . clean, Codllloco. Morcodu,
Poracho. otc . · diroct from
12.9110. II h. buolt hog good Gov...,ment.
Sollod In drug
12,9&amp;0. Coli 111 4-281 ·
roldo. Avolleble your o....
8122.
8evo llhouundoe. 218131 to bocce bllor boaoa Ull . 413·3001!, txt. A3044.
II fl. bulh hog 1300. To- ·11811 Ford Eocort, 4 opood,
bacco llll!ko 11 ooftiO - h.
red llrlpo, ..- .
2 row tobacco tetter · block
t1,400. A modol lnlomo- U, 600.00 conoldor oldor
on tredo. 304-937tional with culttvatora cor
2028
.
11
211 ' toll!lcco plpo
trollor: 1300) 4"x4" x 12'
ond 11' oek llmborL Homo- 1980 Chovy Monzo, 4 c:yl., 4
lito cholnoow 1100. Mor· opood. pretty good oondlgan'o Woodlown Fonn. 304- tlon, ooldng 11 ,180. 304·
1 7 e • 1 2 8 11 o r 898· 3013.
304·823-1943.

'H;LL, ~T CO 'A! lllltJI:. Cf OLD

S1•r VI I:I'S

81

ropo-.

KI-ll orgon.
llh now, low monthly PlY·
menlo, froo foooono In ctudod. •972.00 poyoff.
Don FO&lt;guoon Muoio, Rt.
10, Corodo, 304·413·
1183.

John boot for oolo. Coli'

Home
Improvement•

BASEMENT
.
WATERPROOFING
Uneondltlonol IH.tlmo guo·
rant•. l.oc81 reference~
furnllhod. Froo Hllmoloa.
Coli colloct 1-114-2370488. doy or night . Rogiro .
llooomoftt Wetorprooflng.

(Answertton •onow)
Yes1erdoy'o l J . -: FISHY WIPED SECOND HECKLE
Answer: A tactful nusoand always remembere hie

1 - In Ohio. All work •
guo•••hlod . Coli 304· 273·
2811. R-nowood. W. Vo. •

rn Ool&lt;larl
rn College

lloakottaall:
North Corollno II Joclcaonvlllo
()II Who' a the llooa7
Cll
(CCI Angela and Tony clash
over the pre-arranged mer·
riage of Tony's beautijul
cousin from Italy .
9
end Aclwnturoo of Sonui Cleut Tho
• lffe of Santa Claus end the
binh of Chriotmaa troditiona

a m uto

RINGLEB'S SERVICE, oa-,
porlencod corponlor, eloclrl· :
cion, m-n. polfttor, roof.
lng (Including hot ter
,eppllcotlon) 304-871-20118 '
or 171·7311 .

are traced in this animated
~ial. 160 min.)

________ .,
s-.

.

makes a bizarre attempt to

redeem himself.
9:00 e ll)(!) Rlptlclo The guys
help out a father trying to
learn the truth about hio
s on 's death in an Army
training accident. 160 min.~
(JJ 700 Club
Cll 8 IDl Moonlighting
ICC)
D (I) MOYIE : 'Tho Fflm'Fiilm Man'
Cl) Noua: Tho " ' - !hot
Cllongod tho World (CCI
The 50th anniversary of the
DC-3 is celebratod. (60 min .)
ill MOYIE: 'Tho Gift of
love: A Chriotmoo Story'
(CCI (R).
(jj) When till Mounuino
Tramble ICC) The political
and oc::onomic climate of
G&lt;Jatomalil is diO&lt;:ussed. 12
Iva.)
[HIIO) Amorlco Undor·
cover: Down - Out In
Amertco The unemployed

1981 OotSun 4 whool drlvo JIM'S PLUMBING I HEAT· :
-• mony IXINI. lNG . Rt. 1,· Box 351, Golll- •:
P .U. Kin1g C ov,
,
114-992-7384 mornlngo a polio. Colll14· 3117-0575.
ovonlneo. ,

BARNEY
TATER JU5l
BROKE MY
GRANDMA'S
TEAPOT,

LOOK ATTH'
PORE VOUNG-tlN ..
SETTIN' THAR ..
ALL TORE UP

'IEP··WHAT HE'S SETIIIV'ON
IS WHAT I JUST TORE UP

ELVINEV

viewed as America' 1 midde
clau olips down the loddt!r
of success. (60 rnln.l
10:00 •
Ill (!) Remington
Sllllo Three gunman, eH
disguised as Santa Clous.
craah the office Chriatmes
party and hold laura, Remineton, Mildred end four
(1118111 hoatage . !60 min.)
(!) AWA Wtnllng
Cll e~ llpeno«: For Hire
(CC) Spenw trial to clear
the name oflt. Ouirlc , who is
suopended from tho force
for hla relusel to dlocuoa a
gambline buat gone wrong.
160 min.)
(I) When till Mount.lno
Tremble (CCI The pollllcel
and economic climote of
Guatemala io diRuaood. 12
hra.)
(HIIOJ ht &amp; Tan Hankypenky on and off the field
could foul up the- dlvioion
playoffs.
IMAXI MOVIE: 'Humon-

441·~384.

W1ugh'1 Water Service. .•
Wotlo, clllorno, poolo. Fall, • ;
rotloble oorvlao. Coli 114· ·
218 -1240 or 1114.-2111- •
1 1·3 0. Roooonoblt ratoo.
··~
~r

Would Mko to heul gr•vel
•
und, fill din, ole. Coli otto; ·;
3, 114-441-7447
• '•

'.

I '
•{
dolluor cool, llmootono ar: •',
Olhor. 304-171-3190.
'

87

Upholetery
- - - - - - - - ..

.'.

TRISTATE
1980 Joop Choroku. 2
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
door." ·II c:yl.. 4 op.. em-fm
il•10· ••~ · elr, 1 owner1 11113 lloc. Avo., GolllpoUo.
73,000 mMeo. l31100. 114· 1,14-448-7833 ort14-441742-2700 do yo or 114·3117· 1133.
Ol&amp;7ov•
II a M 'urnlture Monutec-. ·
1871 Jeep CJ 7. I oyl .. turing, II. lit, 7, CI'OWir"''
•enord, front wlnoh, hun· City, 011 . Coli 814· 281· 1 ~
llrl opoalol. 11100. 114- 1470, coli Eve. 114·441.' '
742·2700 dtyo or 114-3117· 34,38 . Old a new ,
UphootONd •
0117-.

l PASS TESTS 'fl.le

OLD-FAS~IONED

WAV...

,10:20

l STUD'(!!

trl''
••••c.• G,....,.. ·
from till Honeymoon••

10:30 ()) Colel!rlty Chofo
INN News
(H80] MOVIE: 'Johnny
llengomully' ICC)
11 :oo ern Cll m • Cll ilia (II

a

I

N-

(J) Mon from U.N.C.L.E
(!)) Newa-ch

a Bonny HIN Show

11 :30 D

Ill

CD Tho Ton1g1rt

'· '

'

ro - ~tar

29 Coal
pnKIU l'l

'

30 Shi nto

.

u•mplt•
3111&lt;-fon•
34 Tahir•
!i&lt;Tap

35 Russian
jet
36 Eve nin~
news hour
37 One kind
of how t iP
39 For fear
that
OAILY CRYPTOQUOJ'ES - Here 's how lowork It :

and homeless are inter·

a.

-:-----:----Dump lruek urvice, wHI

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Ham it up
I Crustat:can 41 City of
51Jnscathed
Manas,. h
9 Ceremony 42 Withered
10 Frenr h city 43 Spirit
II S.aw""d
lamp
product
DOWN
12 Apjl&lt;!ar
I Cnnta ino•r
14 Stann um
2 Exact
15 r at, as
3 Tlwn
make-up
4 E ndin~
16 Sin~ in~
for ru h
syllable
5 llan&lt;'l'
15 l'roprr
27 llaC'khun P
17 Tar&lt;l root
6 (;olf «·oon• 21 Coal
28 Cronr
18 A&lt;tress
7 At this
s.-ultl•• 30 ~t.ru l' k
Me rkel
Li nn•
22 Noah (lt. ) 32 r;one aloft
19 Trilhy, 1 -.~ - 8 Chase
23 Medieval 33 Surplus
20 ThoS&lt;•
10 Latr lahor
sword
38 - llios!
jl&lt;!Ople
lead&lt;•r
24 Diana's 39 Ne w r;u inl'a
22 Alpine
13 Consumrd · mate •
town
snow fi1•hl
Z3 "Liti lo•
Sir -"
25 t"tank
26 Lean-to
27 "Silkwoorl " k-+--t---liiiii

a

- ··

.

·

pacfaliono'

....

1979 Joop J10,1ong whlll
booo PU. quodtotrock, 310,
Y-8. outo, AC, PI, PB,
alldlng rur window, low
m11oo110. 1979 CJ-1 Golden
Eoglo, V·l. 3 epd .. opoko
wheola, AM-FM 11-. low
mllooge. Coli 814· 4411·
9700.
- - - -- - - - : 1811 Chevy pickup 4 -WO,
full iiOWOt opllono, with lllttru, 12.000 mi.
Block with chorooot lntorlor,
liking t11 .100. Coli 114-

Novzo: The ....... !hot

8:05 Cl) 'NBA llolltetboll: Los
An111leo Loken 11 Now
York
8:30 Cll
()II Growing Polno
(CCI A patient of Jason·a.
frustrated by hia di..atrous
po(lrayal of Santo Clous,

-;;::::::;;:::=;:;:::===
~
- ·~.,
82

1980 Chivy Chlyenno 4a4 85
General Hauling
truck, loaded 4" lh lilt, 15 - - - - - - - - 38.8 tlrH. ohon bed 310
'
automodo, 11.000. 19118
Chovy 2 door oodon , Jomioo 8oyo Wotor Sorvlco.. •
11300.00 . 304·112· 2438. Aloo poole filled. Coli 114- :
218 -1141 or 814· 4411·
1178 or 114·441·7811 .
· '
'.•
73 Vena 4 W.O.
K'n't Wator Borvico, Wotlo,
Clllomo. poolo fllltd . Phono
80 CJ·II Joop, 12, 300. 114-317·0823 or814 -317Frtnklln 11vve IIODd eond. 7741 night or doy .
·
175. Coli 114-3&amp;7-7238.

(jj)

,.

v-

Got your c.orpol In ahlp ahopo •
with Copteln
furnt-: . :
tuN cleonlng-wololr damogo .
work. 304·171·22111 .
· .' ·

Oozor Worlc land cleorlng,
1977 Chevy lononu holt londocoplng, otc. Freo ~~~~ •
ton lllckup, AC, PB. Pl. motu Cel I 14-441-1038. ·:
113,000 mll11. 1171 Ford or 814·9112·7119 onytlrilo.
plakup, 304-8711-4813.

MacNeil-lehrer

-· ' t

Chlngod till World (CC)
The 60th anniversary of tho
DC-3 ia celebrated. 160 min.I
• MOYIE: 'The Man In
till Bonte Cleus Suit'
(H90] Spono IHullnitod
PNoents till Sportomen of
tho.
Spons Illustrated
..announces their choice for
the outstandine sponsper·
son of 1985. (60 min .) live ..
(MAl() MOVIE: 'Groot Ex-

You pick th'
wronq end, Rover'

Rotary or :able tool drilling. · ;
Moot - · complllod samo 1
day. Pump ulu and MrYtce.~ ~
304-1911-3802
.• ••.

-:------- ..

rn

NIW8hour

Slolrko Treo ond Llwn Sor·
vlco.londocoplng. 304-8712010.

Excavating
1991 VW dleool Robbin LX 83
pickup, air cond .. lloroo, 50 - - -- - - - - MPG. oxc. cond. 12.900.
Coll304-571-1211 or 304· Good·1 Excovollng, baoo1123· 6843.
rnenll. footon, drlvewoyo,
IOI!IIc tenlca, lendocoplng.
1982 Chovy pickup truck. I Coli onytlmo 814- 448 cyl. po, pb, air cond. Coli 4837, Jomoo L. Oovloon, Jr.
304·273 - 1941 . loovo ownor.

+ A61
+A

should then win the diamond kfng, ruff beck 1o hand, pull trump and procteil
a club In dummy and lead another as before
•
small diamond, again offering the
After r~fllng the second little citib,
bait.
why wouldn't South return to 1111 biDd
Should East still ref~ to ruff, plan and ruff his diamond loser wltb dum•
B goes Into ellect; Wm the dtamond ' my's last trump? Because at thi't
queen, ruff another losing club and point East would overrufl with • ~­
lead the spade jack. II East covers, trump queen and play a club lor Weltwin in, band, pull ~mp and cash the , 1o ruff. That is careful play.
• .:
club king for 12 tr1cks. If Eaat ducks,
•till Nnii'APIIII!rt'ltU'!U8- .. ,.
the spade jack w~ll win. Ruff a heart
·

a

Fotty T,.. Trimming, oturnp
romovol . Call 304· 878·
1331 .

.QJ10981

+
·---

a

RON'S T.._vlolon Service. •
HouHcollaon RCA. Quour,
GE. Spaclollng In z..,hh.
Coli 304-171·2398 or 114441-2484.

11·17-11

With careful play, declarer can WEST
make 1\is slam. Careful play entails U7
• A 87
more than counting winners and los· • J 10 7 s 2
... '
ers . It's akin to going through a mine +9 8 7
field , sensing where danger Ilea and
SOVTH
being ready to take evasive action.
+AK942
Declarer sees two potential losers
- a trump and a diamond. The appar- l
K Q83
ent winners are four spades, three dla· .
+K 8 3 2
monda, two clubo and two club ruffs 11 tricks. To make 12, he will have to
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer; East
pick up the missing trump queen or
.'
avoid a diamond loser. At trick one, as
Eut
declarer pla)'ll dummy's diamond ace, Wnt
Pass
East plays the nine, probably a singlePaSJ
Pass
ton or the top of a doubleton. Declarer
PaSJ
Pass
senses that danger and neutralizes it.
Pus
Pass
He plays dummy's club ace and then
Pass
PaSJ
leads a diamond, tempting East to Pass
ruff. Should East ruff In, South can
play his low diamond (loser on loser)
Opening lead: • J
and later pick up trumps without a
hitch. What II East discards? Declarer L.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ..._.

WKRP In Cinclnillltl
7:35 Cil Senford end Son
8:00
Ill CD Tho A-Toorn
When Hannibal is asked to
audition for a role on a child·
rens · television show, he
discovers 1 plot to kill the
show 's star. (60 min .l

ALLEY OOP

!

NORTH
+J 10 8

By Jameo Jacoby

a ()II Price lo Right

CARTER'S. PLUMBING
_.,
AND HEATING
1980 Chovy luv 12,399.
Cor. Founh ond Plno
1980 FordCourrlor 11.199.
GolllpoHo, Ohio
1979 Detoun 11 , 711 .
John'o Auto Soleo. lulovHio Phono 114·448-31BB or •'
Rd .. OoKtpollo. Oh 411131 . 1114·441-44n

mo~~~go.

A romp through
a mine field

•

DRILLING

'

James Jacoby

port

Purnp ooleo. oorvice. Flogl• •

,. '

'

.IDGI

ClDl Wheol of Fortune

-C~O-l:::EM-:-A-N-W:::A::T=E-::R::WE=:-:LL- &gt;

Plumbing
•- H·e atlng
• •

wlf"i'a birthday but forgets thi s-

WHICH ONE IT IS

(JJ P I - Don't Eot Oolo·
leo
(JJ AUUI Racing '85: Rilly
Racine- Lombard RAC
Rally Coverage from London .
Cll Now Newlywed Gome
CD a rn Jeopon~y
Cl) Nightly Bualneoo Re-

J .ond L. lniiiHotlon . Roof-,
lng, vlnyloldlng, llarm dooro
ond wlndowo. Froo · 1111· •
moteo. CoH 114·1182-~772 . :,..

Now ononge the circled llltlrt to
form tho ourprlae ...-, u aug-

geoted by the above conoon.

Answerhertl:

• Oool

O.ond M. Contrtctora. VInyl
oldlng. roplo ..monl win·
dowo, lnoullllng, roofing,·:
now ond rtrnodollng, con·
· -· CaH304-n3-1131. :

W~Ai A "~IMINAL.
WHO I"AL.L'
INiO C:EM!Ni

()
A rx l XI X X IJ ONE

I I

1

.TOld

•IIK·I'7.23-.

::'tP-t

1

HEERia

11:35 Cil Corol Burnett
7:00 Dill PM .MII(IIIZino
CD Counohlp cr' Eddie'o
Fotller
(!) SportaCentor
Cll Enterlllinrnent Tonight
Kathleen Turner talks abcut
her latest movie ;Jewel of
the Nile '.
CD D (I) Whottl of Fortune
Cll SCTV Network
® Eyowitnoao News
(jj)
MecNell-lehrer
Newohour
• ® Olwrco Cowl
• Jeffoi'IOIII
7:05 Cil Mory Tyler Mooro
7:30 D (JJ All New Ll1'a Meko

Building Supplies

r )
HAei'O SE.

(jj) Body Ekctrlc

66

t)

...

I LAYDEDj
I (I I I

D Cli ll!li CBs NeW. ·
(I) Doctor Who

D._wynd Celtory Kon·
nol' CFA Hlmoloylin, Poralan
ond Blomooo kltleno. AKC
Chow pupploa. Coli 4413844 -?PM.

81

lor Nlllln P o -. :~;·%"~a:.'·e:J
• ' !O
· town. 1210.per
th · pluo depooll. , Col 171; 1104 or 304-171·
·
l · :19211130- 4 p.rn. 1311 o/'304·11711·7191.

I I

Worn on
Clle®ABCNewo

~=~:~-.~c':li'e~r.:~:

441· 44111 oflor ?PM.
l - - - - - - - - . . , . - - - - - - - - - l 1 3 , 1 4 . 1 1 . 1 1 . 18.1.8mllo•
out Rt.
3 bdr .. Iorge kitchen, nice
1211
. 218 . Coli 814-251·
utMity room, 1 cor
42 Mobile Homea
46 Fumlahed Room• -::---:-:-:::-::-:-:--:--::1291 mo. Rot.
dap
for Rllit
F " - d 140 PU lood doHrequired . Coli 814·448·
For ,... &amp;looping Roomo vored. 8 fl . londocopo
1
Appllcotlonncw-gtoken and light houu kMping tlmborat4.10u .. lh.ocoth
3&amp;8.
-wr I 'Ao mlloa 1r Holz lor lhreo 2 -oorn rnoblle •roomo. Plrfl Control Hotel. plno llvo X-moo triooo boiled
oopiili. 1300 ,:.~ 1110 holll0o, l171.ooperrnonlh. _c_ ._n_1_1_""_4411
__
' 0_7.,8_1 _· _ _ ~u:h~ ~!4e:. -:;ii
1
., no poll. Coii814-3B8- 1200.00 dopotfl. no polo, Houeoltooplng roorn, ren111. doyo or814·448·9141 oflor
J3
Hud ocooptod, . coli 304- ....._ 1 •-- ._...
~
a
.
till II OOPM
.... ._.. ""'" _u,, mo.. vpm.
178·3000
:
·
proforled, Ulllltloo pd. t128.
38 ,..r Flm Ave .. 2 bdr.
Chrlllrnoo y,..,, Rodnoy. mlohad kltchon, 1221 mo. 2 bedroom- -trtc, Ca114411-44111 efler 7pm.
lldwoH Rood. 1'11 miloo
)ilef. • dap, no polo. Call 1110.00 per month,
from Rodnoy. Coli Floher:
~14-441-4921 .
•100.00 dopooll, no polo,
814-2411-11248.
rete,_.. iCQURd. Rt. ~.
livolleblo Jon. 1,. 1991. llvo rnlnutoofrolntown, Hud 48 Sp~~c:e for Rent
1975 Ford Grond Torino
;ompllloly rwdocorolld. 3 ....ptod. 304·171-3000
vory
nlco ohopo. 1983
r. homo. nice lot, nice Ill 5:00PM .
lghborhood. woll lnou·
Mobile homo lot, 12'xll0' or Hondo 110 3 wheller 1700.
Coli 814-317-otiU.
led . Move In condition. ~I"Aiili1m;t;t-- •llllllllr,l71-pokl.4th
Nell, Gollpolla. Cell 441·
lll 114-211· 6110 for 44
APifbnent
21" eolor TV RCA Xl100
441 I '!ftor I!"M.
rthor dotoUo.
for Rlnt
oolld ute lnlllnt on floor
moc1o1. e11o. Colll14-24&amp;~ Mlna,..Nio by the . Buill
Moblto ho1110 - · 2 mlloo
;,lonl. 1 bedroom houu.
from GoAipollo on Rl. liB. 9111 or 114· 2411-1131.
fTotal olectrlc. Partially fur·
eoa 1114-441-3212 or 114King wood • coolll..,o. llko
~~- - 114·1192·1211 or JACKSON EITATES 441·3413.
now. *271. Coil 114-388APARTMENTS IEquol
"14-992-7314.
Houolne Opportunity) COUNTRY MOBILE Homo 11119.
;Pomeroy. Ronlll, 4 room monthly rem 01arto et 11111 ·1'1111. R - 33, North of
~ouoo, • lull booomont , far 1 loodroom .,.. 12041or Pomeroy. Lorgo loll- Con 2 .000 gol . wotor ton~ .
RMdv to Ill on bUck. Call
2 boclfoom, ilollollt 1200, 814-112-7471.
)ieotod · 111• fu.....,.,
1116-281·8815 .
!9ood locotlon . Flooooraoblo iocoled 1pr1ng v..e,
fo o llland, ,..1 Trallor OjNIOOO. Bmoll child· I-- B,-_H_on_do_C_R_- -._g o_o_d
l~~tm. Nud reloren-. Wrlto Plozo 80
1nd
Cable•
TV"' 11V1H1il1, non ........... Out Fit. 1, 1 9 d1
'"'x 729 L.
1400 81 ~ 1
office
houra
1~0 1't11 10
Locuet Rood; bock of KU.
~.
:,.~~
I
Jlfn~lpm 1·304-171-1078. ,
treeo • box oprlngo. Whlto
1 room houu, opon · omto4pmend
1 AllrodCummunlty. R -- Mondov-Fridiy, eoa· 114·
French Provlnclol ..odboord
IM.ooo ond dopolllt roqu-. 448-2741 or leovo
mehul".
'
140. Coli I14-441-930B
IC.u 114-981-3849.
oltor
4PM.
'I
~ ·· or opt. for Nllt.
1111' ATC 110, oxc. cond.
F~rnlohod or unlurnlohed.
CoM 114·441-~177.
.iiM-192-2381 doyoar114-

1

0::&amp;..,...~-

a

Miac. Merchandlae

r-·

'

Motorcycle• ·

a moment, bUt firSt a WOrd . 140B.
frOID Our program,»
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(I) 3 ·2·1. Contact (CCI
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IMAXJ MOVIE : 'Tho Slll&lt;lna Moon'
6:05 Cil Andy Orlfllth
8:30 Dill (!) N8C News
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lsLONGFELLO~

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CRYP'J'()QUOTE
12-17
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Yeeterday'a CrypiAiquote: TH E ONLY GUOJl THING
ABO!Yf IT (AGING) IS YOU'RE NOT OEAD. - LILLIAN
HELLMA N

'

Show In Stereo.
I]) SportoCentor
(I) WKRP In Clncinntltl
Cl) Simon • Simon Un-

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dercower delectNa Downtown Brown asaiall Rick
and A.J. in their inveatlgt ·
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(I) Entorlllinnnont Tonight

Kathleen Turner Iaika about
her lat.-.t movie ·Jewol of
the Nile'.
Cl) lelonlght Amo~co
1Bi MOYIE: 'Somothlftl
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12:05 (HID! MOYIE: 'Arnoricen
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12:20 CIJ MOYIE: 'Rod Slcy II
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�• Pllue-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

•

-~Tearful
·
memorial
service
..

'

Tuesday, December.17, 1985

•

I

'

-~ attended by President, Nancy

~-. FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. (UPI)
::- "I wan! my daddy'"
•; ~child's plaintive cry carried
across the cavernous hangar where
:President and Mrs. Reagan tear·_fUlly consoled the families of 248
-soldiers who died in a plane crash In
~oundland last Thursday.
. Tile Reagans encountered such
.. !!Orrow at every turn Monday in a
, memorial service for the victims at
'tile home of the lOlst Airborne
_fl!vlsim, woose units were Involved
_In the tragedy.
• ''I'm sorry, I'm sorry," Reagan
· ~blspered over and over to sobbing
'Wives and mothers.
, "Don't cry, don't cry," the
•~ldent told one sobbing teenage

I

·,girl.

'

• The Reagans' meeting with 279
."liunlly members of the soldiers,
"'wllo were kllled while returning
·'ftom peace-keeping duty In the
.Sinal, was supposed to last 20
· minutes. It stretched to 55 minutes.
, Most of the mourners cried or sat
~ith lnwed heads as the president

and hiswlfeslowlymadl&gt;theirway
across the hangar floor, but several
family members snapped photographs of the Reagans..
Some family memhers, many of
whom wore black armbands, asked
Reagan to sign their programs.
Others clutched the president's
hands or threw their arms around
his neck. Reagan tried to whisper
some word of consolation to each.
One young woman soowed the
president a picture of a soldier who
died In the crash. She hegged him to
keep it. Reagan put the small
snapshot in the coat pocket of his
black suit.
"I'm so pround of what you're
doing," Reagan told a soldier
d-·
-' in a uoesert
~'""""'
camouflage
uniform worn by the Anny In the
Sinal.
"1 feel for you," a teary-eyed
Nancy Reagan. dressed almost
entirely In black, said as she
embraced almost every grieving
relatlve.
Several hours after the cerem-

ony the first txx11es rrom the
Ne.:.roUIIdland crash were flown to
Dover Air Force Base in Delaware
for ldentllicatlon. Honor guards
from the lOlst accompanied the
caske\S from the planes to the
mortuary.
·
Around 900 people jammed the
ooUding for the ceremony at Fort
Campbell.
About 50 soldiers carrying the
flagoftheunitsofthelOlstAirbome
stood on the stage as Chaplain
Bernard Mass led the audience In
singing "Amazing Grace," followed by the Army band playing
the "Screaming Eagles" theme
song .
•Fort Campbell has scheduled at
least two more memorial cerernonles this week; one when the
remaining 234 memhers. of the
peace-keeping unit return to Fort
Camphell WedneSday, and the
other another mass ceremony
Friday to be attended by 17,1XMJ
soldiers from the fort.

at y
Vol.35. No.t71
C
r htod 1986

HONOR GUARD -Members of the JOist Alrbom
Division stand behlitd Individual Oag-drapped rollins
during fonnal arrival ceremonies Monday for some

Repu~ed

••

:. Willard E. Cunningham, 76, 350
J.ong Street, Parkersburg, died
arly this morning at Camden·
lark Memorial Hospital.
arkersburg.
i _Mr. Cunningham was born at
flarrisvllle, W.Va., a son oft he late
teorge A., and Anna Valentine
:(:unnlngbam.
;: In addition to his parents he was
Preceded In dl&gt;ath by his wife, Alma
Cline Cunningham, and one brother
J3ernard Cunningham.
~ Mr. Cunningham waa a ret ired
f1)achlnlst for the Forgoty Mfg. Co..
'Dayton.
He Is survived by one sister,
Audra C. Bretz, Athens: one
nephew, Edward Barnes, Parkersburg with whom he made his borne;
lour nieces, Georglanna Cun·
ii!DiiWD. and Kay Petito both of
'Fairborn, Ohio; Nancy Thomas,
The Plains; Carol Herrold, Athens.
Funeral services wlll he held
-Friday at 1 p.m. at the Whlte'Ethrldge ~ral Home, 125 Lee
Street, Belpre with burial In
Rbckland Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral oome Thursday
f"'" 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

~

Venner E. Hart
·venmer E. Hart,

66, Noble
Road, Middleport died
SUndaY morning at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Hart was born August 9,1919
In LaurelvUle, Ohio the son of the
late Millard F. and Ethel Woods
Hart.
He is survived by his wife. Anrta
Feri'ell Hart whom he married
octotJer 26, 1984. He is also survived
by two brothers, Jess Hart, Arkan·
sal; Fred Hart, Columbus; three
4iSlen, Mr. Ortha Blankenship, and
r.fi's. Margaret Radabaugh, both of
e!ttlevllle, and Mrs. Mabel Fethemlf cl West Virginia.
" Private funeral services wUI be
beid Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the
'Hunter Funeral Home In Rutland.
Burtal wW be In Wrlghi Cemetery.
1llere wW be no caillng hours.

~~

.-

:Frances Hudson
);.

Mrs. William Hudson, formerly
li'\'ances King, of Bucyrus, died this
'.fnornlng at the Bucyrus Commun-

-·

Pomeroy, and a 48 year member of
the Pomeroy Fire Department.
He Is survived by his wlle, Mabel
Davis Moore; two daughters, Mrs.
Jeff !Marlene) Wlloon, Pomeroy;
Linda Jell, Pomeroy; three grand·
James H. Lavender
daughters. Kelly Roush and Lisa
Jett, Pomeroy, andTerrlJoWIIson,
Funeral services wUI be held all Crooksvllle; four brothers, Lloyd
p.m. Thursday In Foglesong Fun- and Donald Moore, Pomeroy; Bob
eral Home In Mason for James H. Moore, Syracuse and Charles
LavendN, 53. Masori, wbo died Moore, Reedsville; one sister,
Sunday In Pleasant Valley Hospi- Margie Cunningham, Syracuse;
tal. Rev. Everett Delaney wUi one aunt, Lufene Weaver, New
officiate and burial will follow In Haven; one uncle, Ernest Quillen,
Zerkle Cemetery.
Pomeroy; several nieces and
He was born Nov. 15, 1932 In nephews.
Hartford, the son ott he late Estel H.
Funeral services wUI he held
and Clara 8. Birchfield Lavender. Thursday at I p.m. at Ewing
He was a foreman at Mine No. 3, Funeral Home with the Rev.
Southern Ohio Coal Company, and Melvin Franklin officiating. Burial
a U.S. Army veteran. Mr. Lavender wUI be In Gilmore Cemetery.
was a member of the Hartfonl Friends may call at the funeral
Chu reb of Christ In Christian Union home after 7 p.m. this evening.
where he served as Sunday school
superintendent, was the first chief
•
of the Mason Rescue squad and a
member of the Mason Volunteer ProfV801 planned
Fire Depariment.
Racine Elementary School wlll
Surviving are his wife, Betty Ann
present
a Christmas play entltled
Lavender; two daughters, Angela
"Achoo!
The Sneeze That Saved
Denise Lavender, Mason and
Amanda Diane Grimm, West Christmas," Thursday · evening,
Columbia; five sons, Estel Ray, 7:30 p.m., at the Racine First
Charles Richard, and William Baptist Church. The play wtU he
Russell, all of Mason; James presented by grades 1 through 4.
Randall of Let art. and Ronald Rexc Grades 5 and 6 will enact the
of Beckley; four sisters, Mrs. Nativity. The programs are undl&gt;r
William (Marie) Rizer of Miners- the direction of June Buchanon.
ville; Mrs. David (Linda) Paroons The public Is Invited to attend.
of Vero Beach, Fla.; Mrs. Eber
(Mary) Pickens and Mrs. Elizabeth
Visiting judge here
Rice both of Syracuse, and Larry
W. Lavender of Minersvllle and six
grandchildren.
Judge J1enry Webber, Elyria,
presided
Monday In Meigs County
He was preceded In death by one
granddaughter.
Probate CQUri in an estate matter
involving Ewing Funeral Home, et
Friends may call at the funeral
al, against Eva Mae Stoecker
home from 4-9 p.m. Wednesday.
administratrix of the estate
_
Frank M. Fugale, Cincinnati, eta!.
C&lt;trl E. Moore
A judgment cl $00'79.30 Is requested by the.pialnlllf.
Carl E. Moore, 74, 32621 U. S. 33,
A related case, Bank One of
Pomeroy, died Monday evening at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy was
against
Eva by Mae
Stoecker,
dismissed
the
Mr. Moore was born October 23, court.
1911 at Syracuse a son of the late
Abalene and Ethel Quillen Moore.
He was also preceded In death by Must confme dogs
two brothers and one sister.
Mr. Moore was a boiler maker
Syracuse Mayor Eber Pickens
and construction worker. He was a and members of council ask that all
member of the Enterprise United dogs lie confined to owners
Methodist Church, F&amp;AM Lodge, property.

lty Hospital.
Services will be Thursday at the .
Wise Funeral Home In Bucyrus.
Visiting hours will be on
Wednesday.

and evening.
, !foday...snow developing with 1
or-21nches accumulating. High 25 to
ll. Southwest wind 10 to 20 mph.
-. Tonight...clearing. Low 5 to 10
. above. Northwest wind 10 to 20
mph.
: Wednesday ... sunny. Hlgh15to20.
~· Chance of snow .. near 100 percent
~today .. 20 percent tonight.. and 10
:percent Wednesday.
••
Extended forecast
'• ·'Diunday lhrough Satunlay
' .A ehaoce of IIIIOW Thursday. Fair
-~rill a chance or ·nuJTies '1n
ao~ast. Fair Saturday.
~nday and Fnlay the lllgm wlll
~from 1Uo25wllh lows51o 15.
:OIIIllllunlay the hiP&amp; wlll be In the
1111·rib lows In the teens.
' '

gift

..
'

SUN FUN
(

·PENNZOIL
.. ~,,,., PEPSI
8 PACK- 16 OZ.

$181

It 's action to last the
whole year! And so easy to
use .. Just punch in the 10 local public
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monitor. Push-button tockoul and automatic
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lrlgels Furniture &amp;Jewelry
Middleport

·SCANNERSFROM $

MServJee With A Smile•

', Located In laciH, OH.
I ' •
1';,.
~,

•

.\l '

,

.

Ani(

Emergency bill keeps
federal payroll going
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - President Reagan has signed an emer·
gency bill to fund several bankrupt
federal agencies, ailowing tens of
thousands of government employees from the Pentagon to the
Postal Service to go to work for two

the homelesS, to register guests.

The hotel, a vacant firehouse the
city had donated to the St. Vincent
de Paul Society, opened Sunday
night after a 3~ month renovation.
The first night, eight men stayed
there. Twenty-two sought refuge
there Monday night and by early
Thesday evening, 20 .men had
arrived.
'
Snow precedl&gt;d the rold Tuesday,
with a heavy snow warning In effect
for the snow hell area along the
Lake Erie sborellneln oortheastern
Ohio and a travelers advisory In
,other parts o! northestern Ohio
Tuesday l)l&amp;ht.
As much as six Inches of snow
was expected to faD ~ernlght and
more was expected today In the
!IIIOW belt. Brisk oorthwest winds
ofl the lake caused blo~g and
drifting snow, creating hazardous
driving conditions.
· 1
Most other areas of the state got
anywhere trom one to three inches
of snow T\Jesday.
Temperatures were to remain
low, risingooly into the teens today.
The storm that produced Tuesday's snow was centered over
eastern Ontario T\Jesday night with
a low trough routh through central
Pennsylvania to the Caroinas. This
low wlll move east, allowing high
pressure In the Plains to move
tlirough the Mississippi Valley and
Into Ohio by Thursday.
Northwest winds with this highpressure system will continue to
)limp the cold air Into the state
through tonight.

mored~ys.

II. R

Both the House and Senate voted.
Tuesday to extend federal funding
at 19Ri levels until midnight
Thursday for the departments of
Defense, Interior, Transportation, '
Agriculture and Treasury and for a
qumber d. federal offices, Including
the White House and the General
Services Administration.
Reagan signed the measure later
In the day, shelving plans to
furlough tens of thousands of
employees at those agencies, which
technically went broke at 6 p.m.
Monday. The administration was
ready to tell non-essential workers
to stay home today if the extension
had not passed.
The extension also gave congres·
slonal negotiators more tlmP work
out a new version of a $])9.7 biiUon
catchall spending bill to keep those
agencies running for the rest of
fiscal year 1986. The House rejected
the first conference commit tee
agreement late Monday.

:383~

,\ BI LL

HISTORICAL BILL - 'lbe House late Tuesday night pliS'Ied
an historic lax overhaul bill that would reduce rates, llmlt
loopholes, and shift some of the lax b!D'den from Individuals to
blllllnesses. House Ways and Means Chalnnan Dan Rosten·
kowsld, D. m, toasts the tax bill with members of Congresss,

House Speaker Thomas O'Neill,
D-Mass., said that spending bill

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ohio
should set a limit on flouride
emissions, Sen. John Glenn said
after a congressional agency stu·
died three Energy Department
plants In Ohio, and there should be
annual federal . reports on safety
programs.
I
Glenn, D-Ohlo, also said Tuesday
he will push legislation to get the
Energy Department out of the
position of monitoring its own
operations.
The congressional General Accounting O!Oce reported ·radioactive contamination exists at the
three Energy Department plants
and there are· doubts about the
rellablllty of data on air emissions
of hazardous materials. The report
also said the Porlsmouth Uranium
Enrichment Complex at Piketon

-Quarterly figures
seasonally adjusted
in billions
of dollars.
- Includes goods
and services.

above. UPI.

Elherfelds
POMEROY - 992·3671

annual reports on environmental,
Glenn said he considered It likely
safety and health program at the the GAO wou id find pioblems at the
three plants. He also ~ld the other Energy Department plants
Energy Department should oot ship and said It might be a good Idea to
ny hazardous wastes to the plants have annual reports on safety
untO "significant progress" Is programs at aU the plants.
madl&gt; in cleaning up the exstlng
GAO said contaminated groundproblemS.
water had been found at all three
"I think it's serpous," Glenn said . plants.
of conditions at the plants. " It~ a
Because of questions about the
situation we do not want to see rellablllty of Information about
emissions at Fernald, "noOOdy
continue."
GAO recommended Independent really knows exactly just how much
monitoring of air and water of the releases of the plant escaped
emissions. Gienn sald .he wUI push oft-site," Gienn ,sald.
leglslatlon to have the EnvironmenGlenn noted the Energy Depart·
tal Protection Agency oversee ment and plant operators are
Energy_ Departroent waste sUes acting to resolve the problems
and to .have the Department of . cpted by GAO.
"II Is unfortunate that they are
Hsalth and -Human Services take
over the dulles of epltlemlologleal coming so late but better late than
studies of radlatlon from the never," Glenn said.
Energy Department.

First training contract written .for miners

Save on men's sweaters, women's sweaters, junior sweaters and children's sweaters •
Open Nights
'til Christmas

released "signitlcant quantities" of
flourlde.
The other facilities are the F~
Materials Complex at Fernald and
Moundsat Miamisburg. Glenn
asked for a review of all Energy
Department plants because releases of uranium dust In lateh19&amp;1
at Fernald.
"I believe the state of Ohio should
establish a flourlde ert)lssinn ·standard - and I have so Informed Gov.
(Richtird) Celeste," Glenn said.
Neither the federal government
or Ohio have standards on flourlde
but Kentucky and Tennesseehdo.
GAO said Portsmouth's highest
monthly release "would have been
12 times higher than Tennessee's
standar."
GleM also recommended the
Energy Department sbould make

negotiators wlll be walking "a very
tight rope" In efforts to reach a new
compromise that Is acceptable to
both chambers and the
administration.
.
"! doubt if they can come to an
agreement," he said. O'NeUI said If
negotla tors fall to agree by mid·
night Thursday, Congress should
extend 1985 funding levels $Ill
March and then adjourn- a move
the White House opposes because of
Its effect on defense spending. · .
The Senate approved the stopgap
measure more than seven hours
after the House acted. The delay
reportedly was due to a dispute
over language added by the House
barling the soon-to-111'-abollshed
Synthetic Fuels Corp. from spendIng·any of Its $7.3 billion budget for
the duration of the short-term bill.
As the Senate debated the Issue,
the agency's board of directors
considered tying to complete work
on contracts for two energy projects in Utah and Colorado totalling
$ffi4 mUllan before the congressional ban could be enacted.
But board vice chairman Tom
Corcoran told reporters the boanl
decided against such action after
receiving a caD from budget
director James Miller that Reagan
was about the sign the btu.
Corcoran said no further meetings
of the board were scheduled.

Balance of Payments .

Glenn pushes limit on flouride emissions

992-2635

Bpnt~cnr

By United Press lnlernallonal
Ohio's shelters for the homeless
were doing brisk business T\Jesday
night as the thermometer hegan
phi aging to what could be the lowest
readings of the season In the
Buckeye State.
A blast of Arctic air blew Into the
state and lowered temperatures
into the single digits In most areas
early today.
Don Lance of Cleveland's City
Mission, a shelter for oomeless men
in the downtown area, said by 8
p.m. T\Jesday 00 men had signed up
foroneofthemlsslon's:llbeds. "It's
plddng up gradually," said Lance . .
''In this kind o! weather they come
ln. It's cold out there."
Lance said for the past four
weeks the mission has been avet11g·
ing 25 to 00 men a night. "lf'the
weather stays like this, we'D be
filled to capacity," he said.
The mission provides the oomeless with one meal, a soower, night
clothes and a bed. Tuesday's menu
included hot soup, a sandwich and
coffee.
The fadllty also has a medical
clinic for treating frostbite and
minor illnesses, said Lance.
In Columbus, oosiness was reported heavy at the Open Shelter In
the downtown area.
"It's been heavy the last few
nights," said an Open Shelter
spokesman, who said about 100
people had spent their nights there.
"We've probably referred Zi people
a night to other agencies."
In Dayton, It didn't take long for
the St. VIncent Hotel, a sheliPr for

about 6 million poor Americans from the ·lax' rolls,
while shifting about $140 billion of the tax burden Iron\
individuals to businesses over five years.
Republicans generally opposed the nearly 1.~
page bill because they said It was unfair to buSiness
and could spark an economic disaster. They pushed
their own substitute tax plan, but that proposal was
defeated In the House on a 294-133 vote largely along
party Unes.
Reagan dlsllkes key parts of the Democraticsponsored plan, but argued that unless the bill gOt
through the House this year, the issue would he
doomed for years to come. Once through the House,
he argued, the bill could be adjusted next year in the
Senate.

-

Special Christmas sale prices
on quality sweaters and
sweater vests for the entire
family. 1

'*

'I

'·

WEATE
SALE

exciting

26 Conti'

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

uncorked a bottle of champagne and toasted passage
of the measure.
"This Is to an accomplishment of the House of
Representatives and to a bumpy rtde in the Senate," ·
said Rostenkowskl, D-111., adding, "you'll be busy all
next year over there."
Given that Reagan's tax project was on the ropes
just days ago, the win Tuesday night was especially
sweet. Last week, the Democratic bill was considered
virtually dead, the victim of a Republican-led revolt
that had blocked its consideration.
But the president, ~rsonally lobbying for the
legislation in a trip to Capitol HUI Monday, turned
around enough GOP votes to prompt a new stab attlie
measure, which would lower tax rates and curb or
eliminate numerous tax breaks. It also would remove

.

'
I

II"~===~~~~~==:J-===============:::~====

pro-family, pro-Job and pro-growth."
House Democratic leaders, happy to have at least
temporarily finisljed with the tbomy Issue, also
pointed to the btU's arrival in the Senate next year.
House Speaker Thomas O'Neill, D-Mass.. claimed
Democrats "rescued tax reform from the jaws of big
business RePublicans. We have delivered on our
historic commitment to tax fairness."
"Only the Repubil~an Senate can stop tax reform
now. Write Packwood," he said, referring to Senate
Finance Committee Chairman Bob Packwood, ROre.
In another part of the Capitol, Ways and Means
Committee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski, of !Uinols,
and other Democratic members of the panel

Business brisk
.
at Ohio shelters

NOW OPEN FOR THE ·
CHRISTMAS SEASON

· Christmas

An

'A travelers advisory this after·

'

lay in pools of blood on the midtown
street, covered with sheets, for
more than two hours as pollee and
FBI agents took photographs and
dusted the area for fingerprints.
Authorities say Castellano,
known as "Big Paul," took over the
Gambino mob, the largest of New
York's Ove families, after his
brother-In-law Carlo Gambino died
ot heart disease at the age ot 74 in
1976. Blliotl has been ldentllled as a
"captain" In the gang. Both men
were 'from Staten Island.
In addition to the auto theft
charges he faced, Castellano was
one of nine people indicted earlier
this year on racketeering and
murder charges by U.S. Attorney
Rudolph Giuliani In an FBIcoordinated crackdown on organIzed crime.

'

: !DlD

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan's
vision of a new tax code for America, surviving
Incredible odds, Is going to the Senate next year
following House approval of a historic bill to cut rates
and make oosiness shouldeti more &lt;1 the burden.
Responding to ~agan's pleas to keep his top
domestic priority moving, the House late Tuesday
night plowed lhl'ough stllf Republican opposition and
passed a sweeping tax overhaul measure drafted by
the Democratic-led Ways and Means Committee.
Approval came, surprisingly, on a voice vote when
no one asked for a roll call.
Reagan, In a statement, praiSed the House action as
a "historical SteP" and noted, "we now look to the
Senate to move quickly and to make all necessary
chan~ to ensure that the final. bUlls unequivocally

boss'-~murdered

Pnllilf, llcw;yit19 Wets, Uw
&amp; Cut (hrittmas '""' Italy &amp;
1111 5prvct Trtt~, Christmas
Cadul, Daor Wl'llllhs, Canllt
AIICII!fllii,..IIS. foilagt PlaniL Far
tltt lowd liM'S !PUN .......
(lllllllry VIIIH, MDiUnent Spays.
Open baiy 9-5; Sundav 1-5

2 Soctiono, 14 Pagea

Pol'nero -:-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 18, 1985

. \'

248 u.s. Army soldiers kWed bt the Dec. 12
NewloundlWid air crash. UPI.

Hubbards Greenhouse

oi.

. Weather forecast
•

mob

enttne

House oks historical tax reform bill

or the

NEW YORK (UP!) - The office, said the siaylngs "could be
gunmen who killed reputed New · the heglnnlng of a war." He added:
York mob "boss of bosses" Paul "The mob bosses are getting older,
Castellano and his driver on a and It could be some young Turks
crowded city street were either who want to change things."
trying to silence the lndlcted crime
The·three gunmen wearing beige
leader or wrest control of his trench coats and hats approached
organization, aut(¥)rltles say.
Castellano's Llf1110ln Continental
Three ·mm arnned with auto- ootslde c:J. the Sparks restaurant at
matic weapons Monday pumped at 5:26p.m. EST, pollee said.
least six bullets at close range into
The gunmen fired with a .32·
both Castellano, 70, and his driver, caliher semiautomatic pistol and a
Thomas Bilotti; 47, as they stepped European .38lkallber sem!auto·
out of a black limousine at a matte. handgun, wounding both
midtown Manhattan steakhouse. Castellano and Bilotti In the head
The gunmen then walked,away as and upper body, police said.
"numerous witnesses" watched,
Witnesses said the three gunmen
pollee said.
then calmly walked through the.
Castellano, the alleged leader of crowd to a dark-colored car parked
the Gambino crime family and the about a half block away and drove
pre-eminent boss In New York off, police said.
organized crime, faced federal auto
Castellano's and Bilotti's OOdles
theft charges In a trial that was to
resume today. His death lett a void
at the top of the Gambino mob,
'\'h9se reputed No. 2 man, Anleilo
~llacroce, recently died of natural
causes.
Authorities speculated the slayings were ordered by "young
T\Jrks" anxious to replace an aging
leadl&gt;rshlp or by asooclates who
feared Clll!teliano would cooperate
with prosecutors and was "better
off dead than alive."
"He was going to face trials and
prison for the rest of his Ufe," said
Ronald Goldstock, executive director of thestaleorgan!zed crime task
force. "(The mob) viewed him as a
liability. ... He could only hurt
them."
Thomas Sheer, deputy assistant
director of the FBI's New York

Area deaths
£Willard E. Cunningham
•
••

•

•

_

........
fl'"'•hl•
11101 . . . ..

CM-111 t . . 8

The Ohio Coal Region Dislocated
Mine Workers' Project has written
Its. first on-the-job training (OJ'!')
contract with an employer, announ·
res director Glen 'Kerklan.
The contract was wrtttf'!l for
McNear's Hardware In Powhattan
Point. Under the agreement, owner
Larry McNear with train Robert
Jackson, a laid-off miner from that
city, as a hardware clerk.
The DislOCated Mine Workers'
Project wW reimburse McNear lor
a portion of Jackson's wages during

the training period and McNear
The OJT contract Is one ol the
intends to retain Jackoon as a Incentives we can otter an emperman~nt employee when the
ployer wbo hires a lald~ mine
contract e9ds.
worker through our program,
This Is the first time M:Near has explained Kerklan. OJT allows
ever entered Into an OJT contract. employers to tailor the training to
According to McNear, an OJT Is meet their needs because it's done
helpfUl to an employer because a ln·OOuse.
new 'employee Is not initially
"We can neimoorse an employer
productive. An OJ'!' contract de- · woo prvldes on·the-job training to
trays the cost ot training a new an employee hired through our
employee while It Increases the . program for up to 5J percent or the
value of an employee to the employee's wages for a specified
employer, he said.

length of training," Kerklan said.
. "We want a commitment In
return that the employer wUI make
every reasonable attempt to retain
the employee when the OJT
contract ends," he said.
An GaU!a or. Meigs County
employer Interested In utilizing
o.rr or of.her placement services
available through the program
should contact the GaWa-Melgs
Community Action Agency at
];7·7341. or call toU·free I-IJJ0.22231B5.

----~

---

·-- 111 .

·-------~ ~ - .

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