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                  <text>Commentary

Page-2-The .Daily Sentinel
Pom:r;-Middleport,. Ohio
Wedneedly. December 18, 5 1~~

Tar Heels tested .by Dolphins

·

I

By COlLINS YEARWOOD

Wlllle McDuffie's 16 pollits and from Mark Price and Duane
UPI Sports Writer
Danny Pearson's 14.
Furrell added 18;Georgia Tech shot
North Carolina coach Dean
Lebo made the score 67-65, and li1 percent from the field.
Smith anticipated a rough time In Smith hit both ends a. a 1- and-1 for
The Old Doinlnion Monarchs,
JacksonvUle, Fla ., 1\tesday night, the final score.
now 3-2, received 22 p-oints from
and that's exactly what he !lot.
Jacksonville missed two 1~ Keith Thomas and Kenny Gattlson
"1 said when we came here I footers with less than a minute lefl added 31.
would be happy with a one- point that would have tied the score.
At Austin, Texas, Nlklta Wilson's
win," said Smith.
"This ls a fantastic game for us, 23 points powered Louisiana State.
He should be positively giddy despite the fact that we lost, " said Texas led 35-28 at halftime, but
because the No. 1 Tar ·Heels JacksonvUle coach Bob Wl'nzel. Louisiana State outscored the
quadrupled that differential with a "They made (the key shots}, and Longhorns 44-00 In the second
that's wey they're the No. 1 team In "---period to remain undefeated. .
69-65 victory over Jacksonville.
At Birmingham, Ala.. Steve
Kl'nny Smit~ scored a game- high the nation."
18 points and Jeff Lebo hit the · In other games Involving ranked Mitchell · scored 20 points to lead
go-ahead basket with 1:42 left night teams, No. 7Georgia Tech defeated Alabama-Birmingham to a nonOld Dominion 96- 86, No. 11 cooterence Victory. The Cincinnati
to 11ft North Carolina.
The Tar Heels, B-0, who trailed Louisiana State beat Texas 72-65 Bearcats trailed by a point at
the Dolphins 37-36 at the half, also and No. 15 Alabama Birmingham hal1tlme, but the Blazers, behind 6
points from Jerome Mincy, later
got 12 points from Steve Hale, and outscored Cincinnati 00-53.
At Atlanta, freshman Tom Ham- ran olf a 12-2 spurt to take a M-46
10 points from Joe Wolf, who led all
monds soored a season- high 22 lead with 8: 49 remaining In the
rebounders with 13.
Jacksonville, 4-2, was led hy points to pace Georgia Tech. The gaine.
Yellow Jackets, 5-l, got 20 points

Rent contro.._I________W__;_ill_iam_F._B_uc_k_ley_J_r.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

alb

!Slm~ I'"T"'L....'--r•....--c:loo=o

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manal!lr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are wf'lcome. They should be-less than 300 words
long.-All letters are subjl'Ct 1oedltlng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUJ be. published. Letters should be In

good taste, addressing lssut-s, not

person~Jitlt"S .

Lawmakers chafe at
budget constraints
Even before the nation's new balanced budget law gets off the ground,
members of Congress are wondering how to protect specific programs
from potentially devastating spending cuts.
The law sets gradually declining deficit targets over the next five years
and requires Congress to meet them, or the president can wittmold money
from nearly every area fi govenunent. Soctal Security and eight other
social programs are exempt.
. PJ1rt of the law must first sutvlve a court test over Its consl!tutlonallty,
but ·assuming It remains In force, It wUI radically change the nation's
buaget process.
'Jl)e massive legislation took so long to get written on parchment that
President Reagan had to sign what one lawmaker described as a "Xerox
row," He'D sign the real one later.
"There will be efforls to get rut from under this bill," said Senate Budget
Con)inlttee Chainnan Pete Domenlcl, R- N.M., just after the Senate
approved the "Gramm- Rudman" plan to siphon off aU the rudget'sredlnk
by tlscal1991.
DlmenlclllEt!d not bave used the future tense.
~ debl!te on the Senate floor revealed, positioning against specific
budget cuts was already underway.
Arlen Specter, R-Pa., sharply questioned supporters ctthe billabout
the posslbUity of closing inllltary Installations. Then he got directly to the
point;
"Under Gramm-Rudman, as511mlng a 5 percent cut In the Department
of ~tense budget, does the Department of Defense have the discretion to
• tak~out a l~r sum from the Philadelphia Navy Yard which might have
the practical effect of closing (It}?" he asked.
"
• lru roundabout way, Specter \Vas told that nothing under the new law
· wou)l have that effect, though the Pentagon has always had the authority,
. with·the approval d. Congress, to shuffle Its money.
Gary Hart, D-Colo., who opposed "Gramm-Rudman," called
Specter's concerns typical of the kind of person who "wants desperately to
SUP!lOrl this bill ... but does not want It to alfect his state."
. Specter voted for the bill.
. ShQrtly after the House also approved the plan, freshman Rep. James
TraGcant, D-Ohlo, charged It would "result In the elimination of domestic
prog)'ams vital to the economic recovery ct areas Uke the Mahonlng Valley
In mMheast Ohio."
' ·Tiatlcant Issued a news release outllnlng the economic decline r1that
arelt ·which Is reeling from problems associated with the steel Industry.
· ''&lt;i,ertalnly, dl'llclt reduction should be priority," Traflcant said. ".But!
will J¥lt be sucked In by the hysteria here In Coogress to reduce the deficit
throlif!ll so-called 'mag!c .wand' procedures." ·
Tr;lf!Cant voted against the bill.
'11\e budget cutting under "Gramm-Rudman" will begin this spring with
abour an $11.7 bllllon chunk. And the maneuvering to escape the hatchet

My friend got married to a buUdlngs In· · nearby non-rent' against what they denounoed as
Californian and will go there to live, control cities and then to acquire "socialism."
but, she explained, of course she cars to commute to Berlo:!ley."
The sequel In West Hollywood?
cannot give up her aparlment In
Meanwhile, tro miles south of The usual. The city rouncU an·
New York. BEcause she plans to Bel-keley, In West HollyiWOd, the nounced grandly that rent control
visit In It from time to time? No, no, same kind of thing Is happenlilg. would oot apply to new construe·
nothing llke that - she'D get a The ctty Is a gay enclave with dons, and looked about avidly fo~
sublet from someone cOOperative extra-economic and eKtra-sexual Investors, a spokesman for whom
enough to pretend he/she .is a eccentricities. Ttme magazlrie re- - real estate broker and Investor
relative or something. The point Is ports that one COIIIICU member has John Parks - Is quoted as saying,
to hang on to the apartment been Indicted on li!deral embezzle- "Nobody Is . going to risk his llfe
because It's rent controlled, and the ment charges. "Amther ... has savings to buDd housing In a city
rent comes to llke maybe half, or posed for a gay magazine, a third, where the councU Is as soclallslc
less, of what the apartment would Mayor John Hellman, ~. sprayed a
and kooky as this one."
fetch on the opEn marlo:!t.
blue stripe In his hair and dressed In
It Is hard to think of any economic
At the other end ct the continent, a !lowing white robe br a polltlcal oostrum more comprehensively
In what Is etten called The People's gala." "Animal House" govern- discredited than rent control,
Republic ol Berlo:!ley, they have the ment, but the non-kooks thlnk rent though wage and price controls are
usual combination: 1) rent control, control is a terrific Idea, so the dty a close second. The distortions
and 2) a shortage of apartments. councU rolled back rents to last caused by rent control ·are every"Ironically," Dan Walters, a politi- SUI)Imer's levels and went on to where known. The lady who will
cal columnist for nie sacramento •authorize an Increase for l9lf5 of not .maintain an apartment she does not
Bee writes In The Wall Street ' more than 3 percent. Time reports need because she Is atrald to let go
Journal, "the rent-control law and that outraged landlords splashed the bargain she has got. The couple
the resulting shortage of housing not blue paint oo their hair, but red
With four bedrooms, the children all
have forced students to move Into paint on the facades of their grown up, who won't give up the
expensive high-rise apartment apartment buUdlngs to protest large, unused space because it can 'I

.

sen.

also i.vm begin.

And Domenlcl, who will be watching, said: "lt'sgolngtocomeasashock
to many of those who have voted for thls."
·'•

.•

•

Kitchen, Eason lead Meigs'
comeback win ·over Spartans
By KErnl WISECUP
ALBANY- J . R. Kitchen and
Huey Eason came off the bench to
lead undefeated Meigs to Its'
seventh straight win, holding olf
Alexander's strong upset bid with a
00-57 decision hl're 1\tesday.
Eason led thl' Marauders with 17
points Including 11 In the first half
while Kitchen came up with two key
rebounds In the final minute and his ·
only field goal of the game turned
out to be the game-winning bucket.
Alexander led by four, 55-51, with
3: 37 remaining when buckets by
Rick Wise and Mike Chancey
sandwiched around Kitchen's free
throw gave the Marauders a 56-55
lead with two minutes left.
Alexander's Kevin Sidclers made
two free throws with 1:22 remain·
lng to give the Spartans)helr final
lead at 57-56. Following an Alexander missed one-and-one attempt
tbat might havl' sewed a Spartan
upset with 50 seconds to go, Kitchen
drove the baseline and put In a
reverse lay-up underneath for a
58-S7 Meigs lead. Chancey's two
free throws with one second left
ended the game's scoring after
All'xander had taken taken the
potl'nllal gam~wlnnlng shot with
five secbnds left that missed
everything from 14 feet out. Kitchen ·
tied up Alexander's Steve Grissett
on the rehound attempt with Meigs

rwe

sen.

a

lind a one- or two-bedroom apartment at the same price level. The
passion for condominiums, to avoid
the constrictions of rent control.
~ dilapidation of buUdlngs landlords can't afford to Invest money In
modernizing. And, of course, the
ultimate act of disdain: .the abandolll11ent of buildings. You just say
the hell with It, and walk away; and
wbat once was, and ·Still could be,
rental apartments become 9:lmething on the order of the' South
Bronx, whichlooksllkeDresdenthe
day after the bombing.
. We know the prudential arguments against rent rontrol, but the
philosophical argument has I think
been neglected.
Why doesn't someone go to the
courts pleading the unronstltutlonaltty. of rent control? 1be 14th
· Amendment provides that life,
Uberty and property cannot be
taken from us save by due JX'OO!SS
oflaw. Well, lberentcontrollerswlll
say, It was due process ct law when
the city councils of New York,
Berlo:!ley and West Hollywood
voted to limit the rent you could
chargr for a particular apartment.
But surely to Urnlt thl' profit that
can be made In one form of
enterprise ts to exercise a kind of .
discriminatory approach toward
profit that the rule of law forbids ....
And doesn't the 14th Amendment
attempt to reflect the
of law?
Suppose that the city councU of
New York were to pass a law that
milk could oot sell lor more that lD
cents per quart. And suppose then
that the dairymen dermnstrated
that atlO cents they could not make
a profit, and proceeded to sell their
rows. Would you be justified In
saying thai the city councU d New
York had made a capital ll)vy on
dairymen?
It Is nothing less than that: A
capital levy on those whose savings
went Into apartment-buDding construction Instead, say, of Ice cream
parlors or barber shops. It IS
pleasant when tbat which IS
prudentially stujlld should also by
philosophically objectionable. Who
will take It to court?

.

Behind the SCeneS'---__.:..._Ja_ck_A_nde_r~.:......:.on_&amp;_Da_le_Vi_a_n_At_ta
WASHINGTON -.One year and

two weeks ago today, U.S. lntelllgence Intercepted a telephone
conversation that established
beyond any doubt Iran's behind·
the-scenes control ct Lebanese
Shllte Moslem hijackers who subsequently murdered two Americans
and brutallY tortured tWQ more.
Yet, In this day, the tough-talking
Reagan administration has taken
no retaliatory action against the
fanatically anti-American regime
In Tehran that was responsible ftlr
the atrocity.
The "smoking gun" conversation
took place shortly after noon,
Tehran dme, on Dec. 4, 1984, just a
few hours after bur armed terrorIsis had hijacked Kuwaiti Airways
Fllght 221 and forced It In land at

Mehrabad airport In Tehran. The
phone call was Intercepted by the
National Security Agency.
On on!' end · of the line was
Ayatollah Mohtasbaml, Iran's am•
bassador to Syria. U.S. Intelligence
later learned that Mohtasharnl had
participated In the meellng In
Lebanon at which the hijacking was
planned.
On the other end was an
unidentified official of the Iranian
foreign ministry. The hijacked
plane was sitting on a runway atthe
Tl'hran airport. ·
Part of the conversation was
garbled, but the Implications c1 the
deciphered discussion between the
two Iranian olflclals was clearly
grasped In Washington.
The crucial statement came

during a discussion of the airitner's
possible move to 'Beirut. Mohtashami, In Syria, said: "Just as we
told you In Telex 2m ct 2
December, America brought Its
Marines to Lebanon. They might
Intervene In this matter."
U.S. Intelligence analysts Immediately realized the significance· of
this remark. It meant that the
warning about the Marines had
been transmitted by Mohtashaml
more than a full day before the
Kuwaiti plane was hijacked In the
mrly hours of Dec. 4. The Iranian
ambassador clearly knew the
hijacking was about to occur, and
had warned d.llclals In Tehran by
cable rot to Clllerlook the possibility
of Marine lnterventll)n If the plane
was diverted to Beirut.

Having repeated his warning
about possible U.S. response,'Moh·
tasbaml proceeded to recorrunend
In the phone conversation that the
plane he Down to Beirut anyway. ·
Pro-Iranian Shllte militia would be
able to withstand any rescue
attempt by the Marines, hi'
eKplained.
Under the protection of the Shllte
militiamen, according to the transcript of the oonversatlon, the
hijackers could then "take revenge
on the VIPs one by one at a specific
dme w that Kuwait might agree"
to the hljackl'rs' demands. The
Lebanese hijackers wanted Kuwait
to release 17 Shiite terrorists
Imprisoned for 1983 bombings
there.

gaining po~slon, ending any · narrow first place lead OVI'r
Warren Local, made 25 of 61 from
Spartan comeback.
bottom, as Teeh tearnmat Duane FerreD beads .
BIG STEAL - Georgia Tecll's Mark Price (25)
The game was nip and tuck from the Oeld for 41 per cent. Alexander
downcourt with first In the Drsthall oiTuEOiday nlghl's ·
sleals the ball from !allen Monarehs' Kenny Gattl&lt;lon,
the opening lip as the score was made the best of only 36 shots
action al Atlanta, Ga. UPI.
knotted nine times and changed attempted, making 19 for 53 per
hands 22 times. Alexander's largest cent. Meigs was 10 of 14 from the
lead was six points, 11-5, a"d Meigs foul line and Alexander made 15 ct
never was up by more than four 23. The Spartans had 16 turnovers
points, the latest at 45-41 with two while Meigs lost the ball eight
TVCAUGAMES
minutes remaining In the third times.
TEAM
W L Pis Opp
, The Meigs resetves were upset
period.
Meigs ................. ..7 0 498 ll5
'I thought we played flat, espe- by a previous .winless Alexander Warren Loca1... ......4 1 356 'JJi7
cially In the first half.The only time reserves, 53-50, as Meigs blew a late Alexander ............ .4 2 :1!9 li7
In the whole baU game vie did 12-polnt lead as Alexander scored Belpre ............. .... .. 4 2 389 ','1.iT
I'Xactly what we wanted to go ~as tlr game's flnall5 points.
Trimble .......... ...... 3 3 396 :1)()
The Utile Marauders, now 6-1 VInton County ........ 2 4 356 :tl3
In the final minute and forty-five
seconds. There's no rmson to be overall and ~lin the TVC, led 00-38 Wellston ...... .......... ! 4 310 348
flat when your're on the road and with four minutes to go. Several Federal-Hocking.... .! 4 293 312
playing a team that's four and one. Meigs misfired shots and a several Miller ........ .... .......0 4 214 293
On the positive side, I thought fast break baslo:!ts by the Utile . NelsonvUle-York ..... O 6 340 400
Eason just played exceUent,' com- Spartans put the winners back In
TVCGAMESONLY
the game.
mented the Meigs coach.
TEAM
W L Pis ()pp
Alexander, who did mt substitute
Chancey followed Eason In the
Meigs
..
..........
..
.....
6 o 4l5 :H2
scoring parade with 16 points the entire game, was led by Kelier Warren Local .........4 0 298 226
Including elghl In the final quarter with 15 while Markin had 11 and Belpre................... 4 1 342 31!i
and Wtse added 10. Joe McLain led Summers 10. Mike Bartrum paced Alexander ............ .4 2 «l9 :llO
Alexander with 15 While Bryan Meigs with 17. The Uttle Maraud- Trimble ................3 2 329 315
ers missed four straight one-andWilson added 12.
Vinton County ........2 3 298 320
The smaller Spartans, now 4-2 mes at the foul line In the nnal two Wellston .... ........... .1 4 310 248
both overall and In the TVC, minutes.
Federal-Hocking.... .1 4 293 312
The Marauders return home
outrebounded Ml'lgs' big front Une
Miller ...................0 4 214 293
by a 27-26 margin. Grissett topped Friday lor a crucial TVC match-up NelsonvUle-York ... ..o 5 296 329
Alexander with eight while Powell with Warren Local. Alexander Is at TIYI'AUI
!4 U 3067 3067
led Meigs with ritne and Chancey Trimble.
had eight.
MDG8(.) . Rkk \\'lsr~ lO , BradRobiMOal-0-2.
The Marauders, now 7-0 overall ~ke Chancey 7·2·16, Shawn Baktr 4-1·9,la Pw-t'll
College scores
and 6-0 In the TVC, preserving their · 1·1·3. J . R. Kltchm 1-hl. H~ Eason6-5-17. rofAU
25 INCH CONSOLE WITH REMOTE

I

TVC standings

·-·

i~~c

,

I .

~~~ ',

~oday
.·

in history

Tocjay Is Wednesday, Dec. 18, the l\2nd day of 1985 with 13 to illlow.
TJie moon Is nearing Its first quarter.
~morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
'l'l1e evening star Is Jupiter.
niQse born on this date are under the sign d. Sagittaflus. They Include
SwtitmodernlstpalnterPauiKleeln 18'19, basebaUplayerTyCobblnl886,
act~s Betty Grable In 1916, West German statesman WUiy Brandt In 1913
(age- J2), boxing champion Muhammed All In 1942 (age 43). and film
dlrecitor Steven Spielberg In 1947 (age :tl}.
Oli·thls date In history:
In;tsffi, the 13th Amendment to the Constitution abolished slavery In the
United States.
In:l915, President Woodrow Wilson, a widower for one year, married the
wldd)v Edith BoiUng Galt.
·
In•l9Ql, singer Tiny Tim, then 47, married liyear-old Miss VIcky on
tel~lon on Johnny Carson's "The Tonight Show."
, In: 1972, the United States resumed heavy bombing and mining
operp.tlons against North Vietnam after the rommunlsts refused to agree
to en4 the war.
In: l!l84, the White House said President Reagan would cut mllltary
spenillng by S28 billion over three years to help slash the deficit from $200
bll~ to $00 bllllon 1988.
·A tiJOUiht for the day: Muhammad All said, "Not only do I knock 'em
rut J pick the round."
•

•

Kennedy Center Honors show was a
rousing tribute to Bob Hope.
Veterans from our past wars came
on stage, Identified where they had
seen Hope"entertain, saluted and
saki, "Thanks ilr the memories."
It Is almost Impossible to have
served b\ any U.S. conflict since
Pearl Harbor wlthou t bavlng seen
Bob Hope.
My memory goes back to 1944. I
was stationed on a piece of coral in
the MarsbaU Islands with 3,&lt;00
marines, soldiers and Seabees. We
were In charge d guarding empty
sea lanes for a war that had passed
us by. We llved In tents, played
volleyball, produced homemade
ratsln whisky and made souvenirs
d. Japanese flags, which we sold to
Navy ships anchored In the lagoon.
The Important thing to remember Is that rur tent had no
floor. 1bls made It quite muddy
during the rainy season, which
made our toes go !ljuish, squish In
the night.
.
With the rainy smson approachIng we decided to take action and
get ourselves a wooden Door. The
question was how to do it. Cooper
said the Seabees had plyiWOd
stashed away on the western sldeol
the Island. Brinkerholf said the
Army always left their truck keys
In the Ignition. Farhart reported he
could "borrow" all the tools we
needed from the Air Force armory.
The rest of us became part of a
commando group whose mission
was to capture the plywood without
the Seabees being any the wiser.
The operation was a success and
by dawn the wood was stashed In
our tent. The next step was to get
the Door buUt before the Seabees

discovered the theft.
First we leveled the ground and
laid rut the loundatlon with two-by·
tlUrs (also stolen) . This took us the
better part of the morning. We
whistled while we worked until .
Schulman rushed In and yelled,
"Bob Hope' Is on the Island with his
show!" Half my tentmatesdropped
their tools and started to change
clothes. "Hey, guys, we have to get
tbe floor done," I said.
"They say he brought five
showglrls," Schulman said.
The other half dropped their
tools.
"Hold It," 1 said. "U we don't get
thiS noor laid the Navy MPs will
find the 1WOd and we'll not only lose
It rut be chopping rocks In the
brig."
Carroll said, "We've been deJ:Fived ol everything that Is good
about America. Don't make us give
up Bob Hope too."
I told them,. "This Is a gift from
heaven. We can Install the whole
thing w])lle Hope Is performing.
Please, guys, you can see Bob Hope
and showglrls any day of the week.
But how often can yoU get a
brand-new plywood floor?"
Cooper said, "I'm going to the
sOOw."
Farbart , oodded, "My mother
would never forgive me If I dldn 't
go."
Brinkerhotf said, "We owe It to all
the people who have made the USO
wbat It Is today."
I didn't want to do It but I had no
choice. Somebody had to beat some
sense Into them. I stood In front of
tlr tent, raised my fists and said,
"Anyone who wants to go to the Bob
Hope show has to light me first.''
Cooper shrugged his shoulders
~I

and hit me In the stomach. While I
was m one knee Brln!&lt;erholf got me
In the jaw. Schulman sent a
roundhouse to the ribs, and Far hart
tried to see which eye he could close
first. Then Cooper started to play
soccer with my groin.
In one way or another they all
made their point and there was
nothing for me to do but fold up my
-~

-

..

:

3-3-9, Bryan Wilson ~2- 12, .lor Mtl.aln 7-H~. Wayrl('
Bay !\a (1.{1.0. TOTAlB ti·IJ-11.
By qu.a rt('n:
Ml&gt;l,
12 19 1• 1~ ....f.O
Alf'!Cander
L1 IK 16 10 -57

'l'utltMIQ•'•

Ohio ftO!p ......., KMuiLI
Alabama-Birrnlngham ~. Clndnr~~tl 5..1

&amp;lith Alabapta ID, Younptown Sl 63

CfdarvUil' 1!1. Nova ~~~ 1 n
Oyl«' !16. Ohio Dom~6can ~
Tlfrlfl JOI, Franklin m
tnctlana 'l'R:'h 101. Bluflron Sol ton
Nlltloftll c.oep Scot'M

RE'iERVE!i

MEIG8 c•)-WWiams 2-0-4, lhlhl'rs ol.(l.8. ~~
1..0.2. Srnl1h2-2.t Blr1n~m7..'\.17.~yder 1-1-l.Meltoo
4-0-8, H~rrl.oo 0.2-2. TOTAU ,1 .....
.tu:XANDER (II) - -staid~:'~" J.:t-8, Surrmt&gt;rs
·4-2-10, Markin S-1·11. AIOr H!, l&lt;rit('r 7-1-U.
TOTAUI 0.1-51.
By quarlt&gt;l"s:
Mtlp

8 16 18 8-00

Al rxt~ndrr

13 12 B :»--11

......
C.W. Pml!13, Sam-d Hrar118
LIIWrt'IKT' 78, Bald 71

Lrllman 7t, M&lt;'t\il:ar E ~ 60
Mass. -BoP;1on 96, Emrrson fJ9
Clld Wl!ltt.IIJ' 87, Jam Jay 16

.....

~

$548

I

1
J
!
I

g

II

S

RIDENOURS
I West Main

I.

TV &amp; APPLIANCE I :
GAS SERVICE

985-3307

ChesttrJ· ·.

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

Stanbni7R, Harvard &amp;2

Ala-Eirmlnl(ham tl!. Orr. ~1
AI'ITISII"'na
Urbo.NI 71
Ct'darvilk" (OhkJI 79 Nov1 71

St.,.,

~~ ~

This
Christmas
-Give
the
Beauty
.
of
.-.
Diamonds

,~~ 'l-~-~i'()

\~~~·

•

Sandy's Boutique has them in school
colors for Meigs, Southern, Eastern,
Wahama and Kyger. Creek.

tent and follow my "buddies" to the
show.
We carne back three-hours later,
our morale soaring and our faith In
American women restored. It only
took us until midnight to lay the
Door. It was a day I will always
rememller. So, Bob, even though
my groin stlll hurts, thanks lor the
memories.

1_. _

oPEN EVENINGs TIL a P.M.

A school Sweat Shirt and Sweat
Pants would be an ideal Christmas
gift for any boy or girt

1For the memories'----:,....--------A_rt_B_uc_huxz_l_d
The hit number of last week's

g

..\UI'AANOER C11NIIY Martin l-4-ft. Krofkl
Sidden 3-2-6. Slt'Yl' Grillll'41 3-..'\.9, Mike 01apman

OPEN 9:30 A.M. ti 7 P.M.; CLOSED SUNDAY
SPORTSMAN . OF YEAR - llaskelball !lllpel'lllal' ~m
Abduhlabbar holds his Sportsman ol the Year award Tuesday 8fter

being homred bySportsiUustraled magazkte. 'lbe38-yearoldceater~
the NBI\ champion Los Angeles Lakers, olde81 player In the lea&amp;Ue, il
onb' the second NBA player to win the awardlnlls3lsyearhllllory, Ul'l.

...

Berry'~ World

SANDY'S BOUTIQUE

320 N. Secant! St.
Micklltport, Ohio
VISA - lUSIIICHAIGE - UYAWAY

Prep results
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STOP I'N AND SEE MATT AND SAY HELLO
'

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,.

INGELS FURNTURE &amp; JEWELRY
MIDDEPORT, OHIO

992·2US

EVENINGS nLL I)

•

; ..

�The

Sentinel

Wednesday, December

Faust expected
to take Akron U
coaching position
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -Fonner
Notre Dame football roach Gercy
F11lJ1!t reportedly has agreed to
accept the head coach's position at
the University of Akron.
The university scheduled a 1: 30
p.m. EST news conference today to
"make a major announcement," a
spokesman for the UA Athletic
Department said late Tuesday.
However, the spokesman refused ·
to comment on a report by an·Akron
television station that Faust would
be named the school's football
coach.
The station, WAKR. said It
learned from sources In the UA
athletic department that current
coach Jim Denlscn, who led the
team to the Division 1· AA playoffs
thls past season, had been asked to
take a position as assistant athletic
director.
Neither the athletic director,
Dave Adams, oor Akron's pres!·
dent, WWiam Muse, could he
reached Tuesday for comment.
The station said athletic officials
at Youngstown State University,
where Faust had interviewed last
week, hinted he might take the
Akron positiOn.
Youngstown State officials had

heard til&gt; Akron rumor and asked
Faust on Tuesday If It were true.
Faust reportedly told them be could
not comment, the station said.
Recently, Faust also was lnier·
viewed br the head coaching jobs
at Marshall University and Rlce
University.
Fausi had an ru Islanding 18- year
high school record at Cincinnati's
Moeller High School, where his ·
teams were 174-17-1. But at Notre
Dame, II&gt; stepped down after five
years and a :Jl.26-1 mark.
11 Faust does take the Akron job,
It apparently would fit In with plans
to upgrade the school's athletic
program being lnstltutoo by Muse,
who was president of Texas A&amp;M
when football coach Jackie SherrW
was lured trom the University of
Plttsoorgh by a lucrative offer.
Two weeks ago, Akron applied
for admission into the MidAmerican Conference.
Denison guided the Zips to an
Sl-62-2 l'ECord In hls 13 years at the
Akron helm. In 1976, the year Akron
advanced to the DivisiOn II championship game. the Zips won 10
games - the ftrst year the school
had ever recorded that many
victories.

Byner needs 99
yards in finale
BEREA, Ohio (UPI) - Expect
the Cleveland Browns to often use a
speclllc run play Sunday against
the New York Jets.
That play can be called the
"Byner Nlnety-Niner."
Browns running back Earnest
Byner needs 99 yards to crack the
l.&lt;ID·yard barrier, and his teammates have more than the usual
Incentive to help him do It.
"I want my buddy to do It," says
Cleveland's Kevin Mack, who has
1,1774 yards to lead the team. "It's on
his mind. It's on my mind. It's on all
our minds."
Byner, who had 84 yards In
Cleveland's victocy over Houston
last Sunday. and Mack are tcytng to
become only the third pair rt
running backs to go over l,!myards
In the same season for the same
lei!ITI.
Only lwlce before has that
happened: Miami's Larry Csonka
(1,117) and Mercucy Morris (l,!m)
In 1972 and Pittsburgh's Franco
Harris (1,128) and Rocky Bleier
(1,036) In 1976. Both were accompllslied In 14-game seasons.
said Byner, who was drafted In the
lOth round ·last year by Cleveland.
''I'm thinking llbout It, oot I'd
rather beat the Jets If I had a

Christmas dance set
A Christmas Dance wUI he held
Saturday, 8 to 11 p.m., at the
Rutland Civic Center with music by
Music Unlimited and Itomlc
Sounds. Admission will be $2 single
and $3 couple. Evecyone welcome.

choice.
"I consider myself a bOO(l,
ali -Jllrpose running back . I'm not
as powerful as Kevin Is, but I feel!
can do the job."
Byner, who has rusbed 229 times
for 001 yards and eight IDuchdowns
and has caught 44 passes for 456
yards and two tos, Is an admitted
favorite of Browns 11-ad coach
Marty Schottenhelmer.
"I like Eal'lll'st a lot for his
tenacity, for his toughness," he
said. "Our primacy aim ls to beat
the Jets and earn rurselves a
playdf berth, and that MJuld be
enhanced It Earnest weretoget hls
1,000 yards In the process."
Right tackle Cody Rlslen, who
mten blocks for Byner, says he wUI
be "extra-devoted" on Suoday In
the Meadowlands.
"I'm sure the Jets are aware that
Earnest's on the verge of a very
significant achievement," he said.
"They knowwe'regolngtoglvehlm
the ball.

Firemen to meet
Pomeroy firemen are asked to
meet at the fire station at 7 p.m.
tonight to go to the Ewing Funeral
Home to pay last respects to Carl
Moore.

Meeting capcelled
The December meet lng of the
Meigs County Democratic Executive Committee has been canceled.
The next meeting wUI be Jan. 16.

Despite odds, Wyche, feels
--1
.Bengals will .win division title

•

Sentinel-Page-&amp; :-:

The

Scoreboard
NBA results

I

NA'fi)NAL BMBI'MU. ASSOC.

GERRY FAUST

Elderly
racer
attempts
comeback
POMPANO, Fla. (UPI) - Age
and aches have not slowed Del
Mlller, a 72-year-old relnsman who
Is a!tempting a comeback In
harness racing after a back
operation.
Miller, who was voted Into
harness racing's Hall of Fame In
199!, works as hard off the track as
be does In the sulky to promote the
sport.
Credited with introducing· bar·
ness racing In western Pennsylvania, Miller said the centralization of
racing In large urban areas has
·hurt the spori.
"They once raced thousands of
places, like Texas, where they don' t
any more, " he said.
He predjcted the revival of
harness racing will come In new
parts of the countcy.
"Miimesota now has a thrtvlng
new track. and Alabama should get
racing in Blnn!ngham,'' Miller
said. "Georgia may not have
parl-mutuels right now, but It does
have a surprisingly strong background In harness racing. It Is the
key to getting parl-mutuels In other
states east of the Mississippi."
· Miller, who started driving 55
years ago, has been jogging horses
on the Pompano track durtng his
recuperation from surgecy and
hopes to begin competing there
again soon. Only three years ago,
he drove Arndon to the fastest mile
ever by a trotter.!: 54, in Lexington,
Ky.
"l'm convinced that harness
racing will overcom~ Its present
problems and get a solid footing,"
Miller said. "It just takes patience
and persistence."

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cincinnati roach Sam Wyche predicts his
Bengals wlll beat the odds and win
the AFC Central Division chiiiTIplonship thls weekend.
" (II my heart, I think we're going
to win this thing," Wyche said
Tuesday. "! think things are gnlng
to fall In place."
Three games must "fall in place"
for the Bengals to win. On
Saturday, Pittsburgh must beat the
New York Giants and on Sunday,
the New York Jets must defeat
Cleveland and Cincinnati must beat
New England.
If any of those three games don't
tum out that way. Cleveland takes
the title.
Although the Steelers have been
eliminated from the playoffs,

Top soccer player
NEW YORK (UP!)- Tom Kaln
of Duke Tuesday won the Hermann
Trophy as the nation's outstanding
college soccer player.
Kaln, a forward from Wall, N.J .,
Is a four-time All- America. He has
played on the U.S. national youth
team and was selected for the 1984
Olympic team but was unable to
compete because of lnjucy.
The Blue Devlls captain finished
as the career leader In goals, assists
and points at Duke. He joins former
teammates Joe Uhich (1982) and
Mike Jeffries (19831 as Hennann
Trophy winners.
The award, Inaugurated In 1967,
was announced by KICK Magazine.
This season Kaln had 14goalsand
7 assists In carrying the Blue Devils
to a 16-5 record.

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1986 MUSTANG LX

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Sunday 10 AM-10 P.M

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$omethln9 Thia Chtiafmsa

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Cost Is $4.

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I

.
DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

vlctocy. We can't watt till Saturday
and say, ·Wh&lt;io, they won, let's get
ready i:&gt; play hard.'
"We've got to get ready this
week. We wlll practice this week as
If our title hopes depend on it,
because they do. I really believe
that. We' re still in It, no question."
To prepare otherwise, figured
Wyche, would he the same as not
preparing at. all.
"I! you say, 'Let 's prepare just In
case everything goes right,' you're
not going to get ready to play the
Patriots, " he said. "Sure, we need
Pittsburgh to win Saturday, but
that won't help us If we don't beat
the Patriots.
"U you approach it any other
way, you' re just conceding. And
we're not made of that kind of '
material. I'm not worried about our
guys. Our guys will play thls thing
to the hilt."
Wyche said he and his assistant
coaches had already come up with
more "fresh ideas" than usual for
Sunday's game at New England .

Wyche expects "Pittsburgh pride"
to carcy them to vlctocy over the
Giants.
"Pitlsburgh Is a team full of
pride, with a tremendous organization,'· said Wyche. "And this ls the
time when organization pays off,
when you've got to come back with
nothing really at stake other than
maintaining that pride In your
organization. I think they'll give the
Giants a tough battle.
"Cleveland and the New York
Jets Is going to he a dogfight. Two
great teams and right now, both of
them are playing well. The advantage goes to the Jets, slrrtply
because they're at home."
Because Pittsburgh's game Is
Saturday, the Bengals could be
eliminated before they take the
fteld Sunday. But Wyche won't even
recognlz!! that possibility.
'.'I'm optimistic and positive In
my thinking," he said. "We'll have
this team ready to play for all the
marbles Suoday.
"We've got to prepare all week
long In anticipation of Pittsburgh's

·
s
1
49
•.••...••••••••
S LB. BAG

$ 49
2% Milk ••••.••••••~~. 1
BROUGHTON

1984 FORD F2 50
PICKUP

The Daily Sentinel

351 eng .. auto. trans .. AM/FM.
step ~umper. mirrors, cab lighls
low mtleage.
·

.

Ohto:

6 cyl ., auto. trans .. air cond.,
AM/FM stereo, low mileage.

6 cyL, 4 sp. trans .. P.S.. P.B.,Iow
mtleage.

1985 FORD
CROWN VICTORIA
2 DR. LOADED

ON 13 01 NEWER MODELS

Member: United Press International,
Inland Dally Press Association and IhiP
atlo Newspaper Association. National
Advertising FtepresentaUve. Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue.
New York. New York 10011.

S1
TV Dinners .... ~l~!·.... 69(

,I
• I

POSI'MASI'ER: Send addreu changes
to The Dally Serlilnel, lll Court St.,
Porrrroy, Ohio 4~111.
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Sugar •••••••••••••••••
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$

mOnth.
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
towns where hom£' carrier aervlce Is
avatlable.

...•,'
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1

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1

.
••

'"

'

v

T-IDE DETERGENT
147

oz.

$4 99

limit I Ptr Cuttomer
Good Only' At Powell's S.rmarloot
OHtr bpirH Sat., DK. 21, I,.S

COFFEE

Hi.$ 599

•
•"

LIBBY'S #0050+8

.

PUMPKIN
29

oz.

2f$1

SHORTENING
3 LB.
CAN

I

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•

Cents

Subscribers nol desiring to paythecar·
rler may retnil ln advance &lt;Drect to
The Dally Sentinel on a3, 61Jr 12 month
baals. Credit wUI be given carrier each

''•

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Parkay Spread •3.~

P~blls hf'd evt'ry afternoon , Monday
through Frklay, 111 Court St .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Vallt!y Publl.!Jhlni: Company/Multimedia , Inc.,
PoiTI&lt;'roy, Ohio m69, Ph. 992·21S6. S.· ·
cond class poslage paid at Pomeroy,

1982 MUSTANG
3 DR. HATCHBACK
1979 JEEP
PICKUP 4X4

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(VSP814J.... )

A Division ol Mulllmedla, Inc.

. I
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$229

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¥
tl

•••
•
••
•

~
••
.,

To

.,
"••

�FARGO, N.D. (UP!) Friends, Jr. will speak for the !amUy at
fans and former teammates will Thursday's funeral. Marls died
rememl;ler Roger Marts at a Saturdayo! lymphatic cancer at !51.
Rlchanlson, the Most Valuable
memorial service today, honoring
the single-season home run cham· Player In the 1962 World Series,
pion who was unable to enjoy his played second base in 1961 when
record-setting year.
Marls hit 61 homers to break Babe
The Rev. AIBltzwWpresldeover Ruth's record. The achievement is
a prayer serv!ceat8p.m. EST at St. marked by an asterisk In the record
Mary's Church, where Maris at- books because Marls played eight
tended mass as a boy. .
more games than the popular Ruth.
The Rev. Jolu! E. Moore of West
Former New Yoril Yankee teammate Bobby Richardson will de- Fargo, who knew the Maris family
liver the eulogy. and Roger Maris whUe the young slugger was

Memorial
•
service
set
for Maris

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, December'\1 8, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio .

· Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

growing up In North Pakota, will
deliver the homily at Thursday's
services in Fargo.
Several of Marls' former teammates are among the paU bearers,
Including Mike Shannon, formerly
wlth the St. Louis Cardinals; and
BUJ Skowron, Clete Boyer, Whitey
Ford and Mickey Mantle, formerly
wlth the New York Yankees.
Other pall bearers wUJ include St.
Louts Cardinal manager Whitey
Herwg, former Minnesota Twin

Bob Allison, Dr. George Surprise of
Kansas City, New York business·
man ·Julie Issacson and Fargo
residents Dick Savageau, Robert
Wood and Don Gooselaw.
·Marls Is to be buried at Holy
Cross Cemetery, where the family
of his wife, Patricia Ann, Is
Interred.
Gov. George Sinner, who Is to
attend the funeral, ordered flags at
half-staff around the state Thursday In Maris' honor.

The New Yoril YanJrees Tuesday
announced that Jolu! Cardinal
O'Connor wUl offer a memorial
mass for Maris at St. Patrick's
Cathedra! at 1 p.m. EST Monday.
Marls was diagnosed as having
lymphatic cancer two years ago,
but doctors said it had gone
undetected for five years. He died
at a Houston hospital, and doctors
said his condition bad been deterlo·
rating since he was admitted Nov.
20.

Kroger Gladly
Welcomes Your
Federal Food
Stamps
•

By The Bend,

Wednesday, December 18, 1986

Page- 7

Family medicine

Adult diabetics hel
BY JAME&gt; FOGIE!ONG, D.O.
A111l!!tant ProfeMor
ol OlteopatNc Medicine
Internal Medicine Con8ultant
Ohio Unlvel'lllly College
ol OlteopatNc Medlclae
Question: My middle-aged uncle
recenlly developed diabetes. I was
surprised to learn be Is taking oral
medication Instead of Insulin shots.
Who Is eligible lor oral medicine?
Answer: Oral hypoglycemic
agents are moslllkely ll'escr!bed to
those who experience the ooset of
diabetes after 40 years of age, and
who have been diabetics fewer than

nve y~. People llkel,y to respond
well to hypoglycemic drugs are also
not underweight, and have either
never taken Insulin, or can· control
their diabetes with fewer than 40
units of Insulin per day.
About Iii percent of people with
"adult ooset" diabetes respond well
to oral hypoglycemic agents. Fall·
ure of these nnedlcatkms lrBJuently
Is caused by the patient not
adh~g to a prescribed diet
SomeUmes the drugs are not
effective because of rondltlons such
as. Infection, pregnancy or heart

by hypoglycemic agents

disease, but cral hypoglycemic"
therapy may be resumed if the
lnterler!ng condition Is temporary.
Question: How effective are the
oral hypoglYcemic agents?
Answer: A diabetic whose disease Is well rontrollal by oral
medication usually needs Insulin
ooly lor acute Injury, stress or
Infection, or during surgery. Occasionally during pregnancy Insulin
may be called lbr. A patient can
also develop an allergy to the
medication and require Insulin.
Some physicians have suocess-

fully treated diabetics using Insulin
and oral medication slmultane. wsly when adequate control of the

Community calendar I area happenings
..
WEDNJBI)AY

disease was Impossible using each

banks will close at 1 p.m. Tuesday,

alone. However, this kind of
therapy Is stlll being studied.
The FDA recently approved two
new oral hypoglycemic drugs
which have been used In Europe for
several years. Some physicians
believe the new agents are rrore
effective. However, If a diabetic Is

December 211, Bank One, Farmers
Bank, Home National Bank and
Central Trust• .

Donation received

Early closings
The following Meigs County

Grace Weber, chairman of the
Reedsvllle Community Flower
Fund, announced today that a cash
contribution has been made lo the
Meigs County Unit of the American
Cancer Society In memory of the
late VIolet Smith.

Meets tonight

well controlled at present, he can
remain wlt h his old medication
Instead of switching to the new.
Question: Are there any compUcatlons with oral hypiglycemic
drugs?
Answer: Hypoglycemia, or low
blood sugar. Is the most common
complication with cral medications. Elderly diabetics are more
• susceptible to hy(llglycemla, especially II they skip meals or their,
liver or kidney lu nctlon Is Impaired:.
No matter what medicine Is .
prescribed. diet Is the cornerstone.
of controlling diabetes. Without this .
dietary control neither oral hypo- ..
glycemic agents nor Insulin wnf ·
adequately govern diabetES.
'

Chester Councll323 Daughters or
Amerk:a wlll meet this evening at
the lodge hall wlth a Christmas
dinner at 6::11 p.m. foilowed by the . - - - - - - . . . ; _ - - - - - -- - - - -- --.:
regular meeting, Christmas proDON'T MISS WINTER SIGN UP!!
gram and gift exchange.

be shooting for turiley~ at this
Sunday's gun shoot to begin at 1
p.m. at the clubhouse.
Game for sale
POMEROY- The Meigs County
Admlsslops--None.
9 WEEK WINTER SESSION
Jaycees are again offering for sale
Discharges--Rose Barnhouse.
18 CLASSES FOR '36.00
THUBSDAY
The Pomeroy-Middleport Game at
SUNDAY
' POMEROY- The flim "Amish,
CLASSES
START JANUARY 6. 1986
CARMEL - . Carmel Sutton a cost of $11. The game can be
CARLETON SCHOOL - SYRACUSE, OH.
·Not to be Modern" wUI be shown by · ·Church w!ll have Us Christmas purch¥fd at th,e fonowtng bustMON. &amp; FRI. 4:30 TO 5:30 - 6:30 TIL 7:30
the Meigs .Cqunty Library staff at program Sunday, Dec. 22, 7:30p.m.
nesses: Hartley and Bennett Shoes, .
TUES. &amp; THURS. 5:46 TO 6:45
' the Pomeroy Lutheran Church, 7 Everyone welcome.
Empire Furniture, Vaughn's Card!· ·
FOR
REGISTRATION PH. 992-3794
p.m., Thursday. The film Is free
nal, Fruth Pharmacy and Locker
and open to the Public.
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
RAClNE - Racine Gun Club wDl 219.
.cal Service reports five calls
Monday; Syracuse Fire Depart·
ment at 7:45 a.m. to the BUiy
Haynes residence on College Rd.
for
smoke In the attic; Rutland at
BySANDRAJ. LATIMER
Sanla purchased footballs when he wine he found at Ohio wineries.
10:36
a.m. to Joe Boring Rd. for
Sanla visited several areas select·
United Pi'eMIIXemallonal'
was In Ada, tenrils rackets In Dayton
Drussle
White to Holzer Medical
tng just the right items for
It's Christmas Eve and Santa has and bicycles In Celina.
F~ESH CUT TREES AYAiiABLf
packed his sleigh. And the Chevy
He got a New Idea tractor for the Chrlslmas breakfast - table ser· Center; Pomeroy al 4:38 p.m. to
Collins
Rd.
for
Paul
Parsons
but
did
S-10 truck made In Dayton; the Ford
farmers when hevlslted Coldwater, vice from Anchor· Hocking at
'A
01 CUT YOUR OWN
"'
Thunderbird made In Lorain; the an Airstream recreational vehlcle Lancasler, glasses from 'Libbey In not transport; Pomeroy at 5:01
Located on Cherry Ridge. Turn East at Darwin onto Rt. 681,
.yans made at the General Motors
from Jackson Center and a Honda Toledo; sausage from Bob Evans p.m. to Rt. 33 for Carl Moore to
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital;
go 4 mi. to Milepost 13. Turn South on gravel road, 1111 mile
,complex In Lords town 31!d the
motorcycle from MarysvWe lor the Farms In Gallla County; pancake
mixes trom the MUI at Clifton, and Pomeroy at 10:59p.m. to a! Spring ~~~~
•Honda made In MarysvWe.
ou tdoorspeople on the list.
: . It's going to be a long night, but
Forcontractorsputtlnguphouses jams and jellys from Smuckers In Ave. for John Hunnell to Veterans
, Santa won't get losl because·his way and butldlngs, Santa got porcelain OrivUle. Leftovers can be stored In Memorial Hospital.
ivW be Illuminated wlthUghts made bathroom fixtures al American· Rubbermaid products he found In ,----------.J-------------~------­
Ashland.
' attheGeneral Electric plantatNela Slalldard In Tlt!ln.
All these gUts are wrapped In
Park near Cleveland.
For the house, Santa chose
He'll be able to get those vehicles mattresses made In the Cincinnati paper and accompanied wlth cards
started with batterlesbefoundatthe area; decorator tables from he found from American Greetings
UnlonCarbldeplailtlnMarlettaand Mesmer Tables In Celina; pottery In Cleveland and Gibson Greetings
the Champion sparkplugs In ToledO. . from Sckl, RosevWeandCrooksvllle In Cincinnati.
He's planning to leave candy he
When he leaves the vehicles under Iii eastern Ohio; rollectlble glass
found at Fanny Farmer In Norwalk
trees, he'll fill them with gasoline from Tlftln and Cam~.
from cans made at Deshler.
Brushes came from Wooster; . and at Anthony Thomas In Colum·
Sanla knew his elves couldn't vacuum cleaners trotit North Can· bus. He knows children will leave
make all the gUts !bat people asked . ton; washers from · CJYde and him plates of cookies - cookies
for, so he made a few trips toOhlo to dishwashers and mixers from Troy. · from Archway In Ashland are his
complete the list.
Slnre everybody likes to get favorite.
As Santa stepped Into his sleigh,
And Ohio officials coukln't be clothes for Christmas, Santa chose
happier. Gov. Richard F. Celeste, · Bobble · Brooks items made In he tripped over something hard and
who lnaugorated a Buy-Ohio cam- CleVeland and Palm Beacl) In . small. There on the Oooroftheslelgh
palgn the day he was ~orn Into ·Cincinnati and shoes from the U.S. were a few lumps ol coal from
AND
office, is setting a good example. ShoeCorp.lnChilllcotbeandBrooks soulheastern Ohio In case he found
any bad little boys and girls.
He's tour!ngthestatelooklngforthe In Nelsonville. . ,
'made in Ohio' label for his
For people planning a party, he
Christmas purchases.
chose the Bicycle playing cards
"When we Buy Ohio, we are from Cincinnati; popcorn from the
Hubbards Greenhouse
creating job for Ohioans," he said.
Markln·Upper Sandusky area;
NOW OPEN FOR THE
Kenner toys from Cincinnati were cheese from the Amish area of east
Santa's choice to lUI children's ceniral Ohio; Trail bologna from
CHRISTMAS SEASON
stockings. Also In the pack Is the Dundee in Tuscarawas County;
Poi•llial, ....... llatkeh, liw
Etch·A-5keich.from Bryan that has Friendly ice cream from Troy and
&amp; Cut Clwislmas r-. llaly &amp;
been put under trees for 25 years. Veivel ice cream from Utica and
1111 5pw TMt. Ouistmas
Caduf, Door Wl'lflb, Canlle
742·2211
POMEROY
Amo~~ywownh, Foiog1 ...nts. For
110111 Of WAllO, WHilE WI AlE IEnEI THAN WE HAVI TO It
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle·
CHESHIRE . - The annual
port Literary Club will meet · . Chris~ program of the SUver
Wednesday, 2 p.m., Mthe home d. Run llaptlst Church wlll be held al
Mrs. Bernard ·Fultz. ·
·7: 30 Friday night at the church.

"DANCE FOR JOY"

·Veterans Memorial

AEROBIC DANCE CLASS

Emergency squads
answer jive calls

Santa fills list ·buying all-Ohio

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE,
MTN. DEW, PEPSI FREE,

Diet Pepsi
or Pepsi Cola .............2-Ltr.

89 c
Semi-Boneless
Smoked Hams

Rutland Furniture Will Be .Open
For Your Shopping Convenience

Fruit Bowls
and Baskets

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18th
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 19th
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20th
MONDAY, DECEMBER 23rd
.
TIL 8 P.M.

.. Re,Opan 7:00am
' December 26. 1995

.....

. .

•

a.gc

r;::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::;l

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE GRAIN
FE[!) BEEF 7" CUT

~:=n~:a~ ..."· $2

1

99

Maxwell House
Coffee
3-lb. Can

.::...
LARGE 72 SIZE

·'

California
Navel Oranges

.

i(;~~;;ERVE

Krusty Rolls ... 12-0z.

Open beiy 9-Ji; Sund•v'1·1i
,-

Christmas dinner,
program planned

2 $149
.
FULLY COOKED

Turkey Dinner
For
BO 48 SIZE

DUNCAN HINES READY TO SPEAD'FROSTING 16 1\ -0Z. $1.29

3 FOR $1.00

All WEEK
~

.

.... .

' .

. '·
r' ' '
.,

'.

Double
ou ons

All Dinners
Must Be
Picked Up
By 5:00pm
Dec. 24th.

•10..12-lbs. Turkey
·
•2.Jb~. Dressing •24-oz. Giblet Gra¥y
•12 Dmner Rolls •2-lbs. Green Beans
Serves S-1 0 People

8&amp;

Manufacturer's

With $10;00 Or More Purchase

_
...

'

lotel .-tlaflctbl '

COPVAIGHT 1!8 . THE lt:AOGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNOA.V,

DEC. 15. THAOUGH S.4TURDAY, OEC. 21 . 11115, IN CALLPOLIS &amp; POMEROY STOAES.
WE RE5EAVE THE AIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLOTO DEALERS.

....

/l

""" . . . .h,
f
v.., MDn~.ment
5anovs.

.. lowtd 0111'1

c-~~ry

LONGVIEW, Texas (UP!)- An
anonymo~s Santa Claus and a town
tun of Good Samaritans are
replacing what a Grlnch stole Christmas gifts collected for 250
poor families.
,
Thieves broke Into a building
sOmetime Sunday or Monday,
taking more than $3,00l worth or
toys collected durtng the past two
months by · the Longview Jaycees

LIMIT 1 WITH ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

..'
..

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21st
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 24th
TIL 5 PM.
FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

Rutland Furniture

Santa, samaritans help ·

Crisco
$199
Shortening ... 3 -lb.

' ,•.'. '-

.

•.

REGULAR OR BUTTER FLAVOR

..
... .
.

.

Stuffing Mix

~o

$14

!:=~~-,·~· ·~: $199

Stove Top

$385t•

·-'

·1
:1

:a

"~
!
I

l~J~~~J~~------~~!l~ID!~•I

THORN APPLE VALLEY ROUND OR FLAT

'

BRADFORD'S

I

&amp;:OIJpm . ...
December 24, 1985

:...

CHRISTMAS TREES

~

14-17-LB. AVG. WHOLE

Cl~e

•'

I

1
·
!

Pound

•'

·--~~~-~-~--~~~---------~

.'

�Wednesday, December 1
•We FI"II'Ve The Flight To Limit Quantities• Prices
Effective Wednesd,y, December 18 Thru Tuesday,
December 24, 1985•USOA Food Stamps
Accepted•Not Responsible For Typographical Or
Plctoral Errore.

NOW AVAILABLE
HOLIDAY
FRUIT BASKETS
AND PARTY TRAYS

__;...~-Quirks
Zwick vs. ZWick over House seat
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (UPI)hRep. Jill Zwll!k, R-111., knows one of
her opponents In the GOP primary
In March very well. He's ber fanner
husband, Morton Zwick.
Zwick, a commodities broker
from East Dundee, flied his candidacy petitions Monday for !he tiith
District House seat thathlsex-wlfe,
living In nearby Elgin, has occupied
since 1981.
The Zwlcks were divorced In 1984
- after 16 years of marrtage and have
four children. Zwick said they al't'
on. amicable zelms.
"I'm _not ruM!ng against anybody,l'm runntng .for _the office of
state representative. I think I've got
some new solutions to some old
problems," Zwick said.
"I have the highest regard for my
fonner wife. She's a lovely person,
a goOd mother. There Is no
vindictiveness. We share, among
other things, capital assets, a house,
and four lovely children."
Zwick, 47, has never nm for office
befol't', but has traded pork bellles
,at the Chicago Mercantlle Exchange for 16 years. He said hls
fonner wife wished him good luck
when she learned of his plans.

eREGULAR•BUTTER ·

Crieco
Shortening

89
LIMIT ONE
PLUS 110
ADDITIONAL
PURCHASE

·3 LB.
CAN
•

' '

: $UPERIOR ~ONELESS•14-17

::

USDA GRADE A •10·12 LB. AVG.

LBS. AVG.

Hen
Turkey

Tavern
Whole Ha

Jill Zwick"stick
said toshe
candidates
the hoped
Issues"the
In
the GOP primary, which also
Includes two other contestants.
"Neither one of us wants to
display our prtvate life on the front
pages," she said.

•

FROZEN 4-7
LBS. AVG.

TURKEY

•

: PROGRAM SCHEDUlED- First through fourth
.graders at RaclJte· Elementary School wDJ present
~ ·Achoo!

The Sneeze That Saved Christmas" oo
Thursday evening, 7:30 p.m., at 1hz Racine Flnit
Baptist Church. The play wW feature Jayon
Carpenter, lying down, as Achoo, Robert Reiber as
Krlngle Kat, Ryan Holter as Santa, and Angle

Carleton as ooe of several marching mice. FolloMIIg
the play, fifth and sixth grade studenls wW enact The
Nativity..The programs are UDder the direction of
June Buchanon. The Raclne Elementary Band,
under the direction of John VanReeth, wDI also be
performing. The pubUc Is Invited to attend.

,.

-·

By WILLIAM C. TROTJ'
United Preis falernatlonal
: WAR OF wrrs: Rich Uttle's
jmltatton of George Bums is pertect
except for one little flaw, Burns
nys. Burns recently caught Little's
·;tel and sent him a compllmentary
telegram. "Saw yoq, last night on
television," Burns wrote. "And you
wel't' maJVelous. In fact, you were
so good, I'm not sul't' whether I'm
you oryou'l't' me, or we're hothme,
or we're both you. · P .S. You hold
your cigar In the wrong hand."
Utile wired back and Included an
explanation for the problem.
'.Thanks for the kind words. I
appreciate It," he said: "P.S. I
practice you In the mirror."
Bums walled a blt and then
responded by saying, "Nobody
likes a smart aleck."
· HEMINGWAY'S NEWEST

•PEELED•DEVEINED

tS elect
Oysters

Virginia Capes
Shrimp
'

99
'

•MICROWAVE •WHITE
•ASSORTED COLORS

o·omino
Sugar

JUMBO ROLL

~
~!\il

l
I I' ~

FLORIDA

:: Sweet
:;Tangerines
..

••

2$

Sl9S.

5LB.
BAG

oz.

BOX

Coca Cola
BULl SHELLED

·wALNUTS

"· $199

..

GLAZED FRUITS - NUTS - CANDIES

too

much noise, drive lnlo The Muftlet
Bay and get a free, professional Inspection for muftler leaks, holes,
damage, broken hangerS or clamps
and for weak or corroded pipes. It It
needs replacing, we'tllnstall a
Iough, durable Walker" Tru.flt"
muftter at a very competitive price.

MASON, WY.

CALLA HAMS••••• ~.JP.t.~.np,.ua, ••••99&lt;
PEPPER LOAF .................. £~. S2.69
BOLOGNA ....................... £~. S1.19
SALAD ....................11••••• 99&lt;

COUNTRY CROCK

10 LB. IDAHO

BAKING

POT ATOES,,,,,,,, sI. 59
NEW GREEN
CABBAGE .............JJI ..... 29c
3 LB. REO OR GOLDEN

ORANGE JUICE .................. S1.49

Meigs County Emergency Medical SeJVIce l't'ports five calls
Tuesday; Pomeroy at 11:40 a.m.
transported Charles Dill to Veterans Memortal Hospital; Tuppers
Plains at 12: 16 p.m. transported
Barbara Bailey to Veterans Memortlil Hospital; Rutland at 7:41p.m.
to ' Melgs Mine No. 2 for Charles
Wolfe to Holzer Medical Center;
Racine at 8:19 p.m. transported
Amy Smith from an auto accident
on Rt. 124 to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Racine at 8:43 p.m.
transporteed Shannon Doah Hinkle
from the same accident to Veterans
Memortal Hosplt al.

Admissions: MatUda Rowley,
Pomeroy; -Rojlert Flyer, Middle·
port; Clarence Gang. Pomeroy.
Discharges: Martha Ta::}.
Howard Neece. VIctor Young, r.:
Turner, Mallssa Gennan.

1 LB.

WE HAVE A LARGE VARIETY OF

If your muffler's making way

DEUCIOUS

Veterans Memorial

$
B~G

SPECIALISTS

NOODLES ............................... 79c

99
lnshell Walnuts

MUFFLER INSTALLATION

I OZ. REAMES

Banquet
Fried Chicken

TAB, SPRITE, DIET COKE,

INSPECTION

HARDWARE

MILK .....................A1 ..... 69&lt;

NO COUPON
NEEDED

'

FREE--_

PICKENS

CHOCOLATE

EMS runs

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HOUGHTON'S

39

~'

Pioneer 6 ages well
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. (UP!)
- Pioneer 6 may be the senior
citizen &lt;&gt;f Interplanetary _travel, but
old age Is not taking Its toll on the
craft
Pioneer. which has been circling
the sun for 20 years, Is stm
operating with the vlgorof Its youth,
scientists say.
Pioneer, designed for a life of slx
months, Is now In operation the
longest of any Interplanetary
spacecraft.
NASA tracks Pioneer's signals
only occasiOnally - when It
happens to be In an Interesting
position.
Pioneer was tracked Tuesday for

45 minutes, and the spacehagsncy
reported the caft was "stlll alive'
and returning data.
"Pioneer 6 Is such a good
spacecraft thatwemaygetanother
five years out of It" said Richard
Flmrnel, mission mamiger. ·
Pioneer, launched Dec.16, 1965, Is '·
140 pounds and equippedbwlth :
three booms It gets power lrom :
solar cells covering Its sides.
--

holidays on the Island ol Barbados I~~~~':~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~
with hL• .6irlfrlend, Andrea Rey- ~
nolds.
BLUEGRASS BLUE§ OVER
'l'1IEFl': Bluegrass great BW
Monroe has been victimized again.
A 300-pound safe containing mol't'
than $10,tnlln cash and rings was
taken from the bedroom on his.tour
bus sometime In the past week. The
theft comes a month after vandals
broke Into hls Goodlettsville, Tenn.,
home and smashed his first
mandolins.
"We al't' In the process of
KKRICH
Investigating It now," Capt. George
Farmer of the Sumner County
Sheriffs Department said of the
SUPERIOR'S
sate theft. "We don't have any facts
to Indicate that the two (crimes)
are related but we al't' looking Into
HOMEMADE
that possibility."

Customs agency becomes SantaJs helper

GRANULATED

Bounty Towels ~·

TOUCHES ON BISEXUALITY: In more than one of hls marrtages,''
Ernest Hemingway's lOth pos- said Hemingway biographer Peter
thumously published novel wW be a Griffin.
departure from machismo, the - SANTA CLAUS VON BULOW:
publisher says. "The Garden of The season's greetllngs lrom Claus
Eden," which Hemingway worked - von Bulow, not Santa - are not
on for 14 years, deals with very traditional. Instead of a
bisexuality and has "tenderness Christmas tree or pastoral snow
and vulnerability," says Scribners scene, Von Bulow's Clu'lstmas
editor Tom Jenks, who calVed the cards feature a photograph of him
book ou I of a 1,500·page and his daughter, Cosima, leaving a
Providence, R.I., courthouse the
manuscript.
· "Those people who have scorned day his second trtal went to the lury
Hemingway for machismo and a June 6.
Von Bulow. eventually acquitted
kind of brutality In his public Ufe
of
twice trying to kill hls heiress
will have to l't'assess him," Jenks
said. "The Garden of Eden" Is wife, Sunny, Is shown with a wide
about a writer and his new wife who smile on his face. The message
find themselves lusting for the Inside Is more In keeping with the
same woman. "I know from Christmas spirit - "Merry Clu'lstconversations with Mary (Heming- mas with many good wishes for the
way, the writer's last wlfet that coming year." Von Bulow and
Ernest was Involved In androgyny Cosima reportedly will spend !he

in the news---

and leaped from the car.
The !log spotted officers Lloyd
Wentz, Edna Lewis and Taml
Swain running and sank his teeth
Into their legs.
"The dog did exactly as he Is
trained to do," said Capt. Barry
·Glover. "We can't fault the a nimal
or the handler."
The reckless-driving susect was
subsequently arrested.

Police dog bites cops
-CLEARWATER, F1a. (UP!) Bengal, a canine member of the
Pollee Department, sank his teeth
Into three good guys and let the bad
guy get away, but his boss said the
dog was just following orders.
Pollee said K-9 officer Duane
Smith ordered Bengal to stay In the
patrol car while he joined three
other officers chasing a reckless·
driving suspect Monday.
When Smith shouted to another
officer, "Gel him! He went that
way," Bengal took that as an order

People in the news

FRESH EASTERN SHORE

The Daily Sentinel Page 9

Ppmeroy- Middleport, Ohio

· Wednesday. December'18, 19B5

•

.

~·

No Pomeroy
council meeting
Monday's regular meeting of
Pomeroy VIllage Council was
cancelled for lack of a quoruin.

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~J-~~•!g~a:!10~TI.~~D~~~-~~~~~~~-~----------------------~P~~~v~M~i~~~~~~~rt~.gQ~h~!_----------~----------~w~~~~~~v~.~D~~~m~~~r~1~8~;!1!98~5

;~.~ine-year old fights

Bridge put
in funding bill

:for life following ·
_)·escue from pond

1

'

; :.~ CCLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A
•:'-year-old boy who spent 40minutes
trapped under lee in a pond is
• ~ling for his Ufe while one fl. his
·•·rescuers says his Christmas wish Is
: lbr his SUIVIval.
-" • Jeremy Ghllonl fell into the pond
- as he was rushing back home at
&gt;4bout 8: JQTuesday rroming to pick
...Pa forgotten Item to take to schooL
_H~ decided to cro;s the pond as a
shortcut to his home in a rural area
-Of eastern LiCking County.
: · The youngster, a third grade
::!udent, was in critical condition
o.todaY at Chiklrm's Hospital in
''@olumbus in a drug· induced coma
_In an attempt to prevent brain
• !jamage. He was hooked up to a
·~alhlng machine to assist his
~ llrealh1ng, while his heart, which
;, liad stopped when firefighters Tom
.eurry and Mike Packham pulled
,'!J!m from about 15 fet&gt;t of water,
~ .was beating on Its own.
" •. Doctors said jt was too early tD
;:detennlne If the child had suffered
· 'iiny ·brain damage.
· · "I'm just praying to God," Curry
· ~d Tuesday night at the Newark
;1Jreftghters' Christmas party. "It
· 111re·w0Uld be niCe to save one."
CUrry and Packham rowed out to
swt where the boy went under
:JIIId used gr'!Ppllng hooks to
•retrieve Jeremy after other rescue
( \'Prkers had been unable to lind

;t"

hlm·

.

-;- Madison Township Fire Chief Bill
~ties said the trigld water temper;:4ture may have helped save the
-boy, noting that other people have
_lived after being submerged for as
dl!Ri as an hour.
, • Nearly two years ago, Jimmy
i-!J'ontlewlcz or Chicago was sub·••
mergPd in the icy waters of Lake
-Michigan for :aJ minutes before
,'ISeing P.lled out He has apparently
-~ered and leads a normal life.
i. : Ghllonl was walllilg at a bus stop

'·•

with two other cbUdren when he
decided to run back home.
"Apparently be was trying to
hurry back to hls house to get
wbatever he brgot before tbe bus
came, and he took a shortcut across
the pond," said Settles.
Rescue workers found footprints
in the new-fallen snow on the pond
leading to a wide hole In the lee.
Jeremy's two friends ran to a
nearby home to get help. Moments
later, Jeremy's mother, Monica
Kashner, and her brother, Tim
Ghllont, who lived nearby, ran to
the pond. Mrs. Kashner's husband,
Thomas, a truck driver, was at
work.
"We were all terrified, but I can't
say enough about the medics and
rescue workers," said Tim Ghlloni.
"Tbey were incredible. I'm so glad
they had the equipment and they
worked so fast. They found him In
only a few minutes."
Settles said rescue workers are
trained never to give up on a victim
of such an accident because people
fl.ten recover after extended perlods in cold weather.
"We knew the conditions were
cold and since It was so freezing, we
thought we had a chance," Curry
said. "I'll tell you God must have
been with us, because Mike and I
weren't out more than five minutes
when we found the kid."
Curry, father of five daughters,
said he could feel for Jeremy's
parents, as could all the firefighters' famUles celebrating around

Weather foreCQst

him.

"You don't want to see a tragedy
like this happen any time, but
especially with Christmas coming
up," Curry said. "We're just all
pulling for him, and every bit of
help- spiritually, mentally, medically - will help. And that would "
just about make our Christmas for
him to make it."

'~. Frances R. Hudson, Iii, of 500l St.
,.Rt. 4 In Bucyrus, died Tuesday
')pornlng at the Bucyrus·commun1ty Hospital after brief lllness.
- _Born Aug. ·'n, 1917 In Meigs
·. ewnty to the late ParkEdwardand
:Ne111e Ruth Boring King, Mrs.
~-Hudson was a 1936 graduate of
. · f'lli'Mroy High School. She married
; :~llllarn H. Hudson on July 4, 1940
•1111&lt;1 moved to Bucyrus In 1941. She
was a member ri the Scioto United
' Methodist Church.
.......
·~· She Is suiVIved by her husband;
. ~ BOllS, WWJam C. Hudson of
~a. James E. Hudson and
tfobert G. Hudson ri Bucyrus; one
·daughter, Elizabeth A. Daniel of
' ~; 10 grrandchUdren; one
~.other, Charles Legar of !'orne·
-~; five sisters, Leota Norris of
..Akron, Louise Morris of Phoenix,
_Ai,- Martha Anderson of Mlddle_Jlllrl; · Kathryn Spencer of Anna
Marla, Fla. and Evelyn Gilmore d
POmeroy.
-~-In addition to her parents, she
_,.preceded In death byCIIeslster.
• ;• Services will be 1: 30 p.m. Thurs·
My at the Wise Funeral Home, 129
West Warren St. tn Bucyrus with
· ~- Meredith Coleman and Rev.
'M,P- Paetznlek officiating. Burial
will be In Crawford County Memor-tll Gardens. Friends may call at
f!le funeral home anytime after 1
p.m. today with the family present
from 7 to 9. Those wishing to do so
may make memorial contributions
at the funeral home to the Scioto
P.~ited Methodist Church.

a

Homer A. Kuhl
" Homer Alvan I&lt;uhl, 91, Charmco,
W. Va., died Monday at Fairlea
·Hospital following a short lllness.
: Mr. Kuhl was born February 28,
~ ~the son of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Joshua Kuhl. He was also preceded
In death by his wile, Bessie In 19'11J.
-:;.He was a retired carpenter, a
member of Carpenter and Joiners
Union, American Legion, The
Moose and a veteran of World War
-1.
: He Is suiVIved by one daughter,
~ell Canfield, Charmco; one son,
Charles Kuhl, Pomeroy; two sisters, Vacle Stanley, Parkersburg;
qj~ve Pratt, Weston, W. Va.; five
grandchildren and seven great '
ll!'lllllkhlldren.
Funeral services wlll be held at
l¥lQII on Thursday at tbe Wallace
alld Wallare Funeral Home Chapel,
Rainelle, W. Va., with the Rev.
~roy Craneotrlelallng. Burial wlll
bl! in Wallace Memorial Cemetery.
Jilrlends may ' call at the full!ral
~ Thursday from 9 a.m. until
Ume d services.

;Lula
Mae Smith
,,
_'' _Lula Mae Smith,
87,
.
. EWlniJion,
.

. ·' .

9

died Tuesday morning at O'Bienness Hospital, Athens.
·
She was born Oct. 27, ll9!, In
Liberty, W.Va. to the tate Clayton
and Nancy Harrlson Hilt.
She Is survived by her husband,
F1oyd M. Smith· one daughter,
Barbara J. Alvarl"l, Columbus·
and, one granddaughter: Jennifer:
Also SUIVIving are two brothers:
Ambrose Hlll, Bancroft, W.Va., and
Woodrow Hill, Bucyrus, Oh.
She was preceded lndeathbyflve
brotbers and five sisters.
Mrs. Smith attended the Wilkes·
vute Methodist Church.
Services will be beld Friday, at 1
p.m., at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, VInton. Burial wDI he at the
VInton Memorial Park.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Thursday from 6 p.m. untU 8
p.m.

William R. Sprague
'

William R. Sprague, 64, Mlddll'port, died at Holzer Medical Center,
Tuesday.
He was a retired telegraph
operator, a World War II Army
veteran, member of Middleport
United Methodist Church.
He was born Nov. 22, 1921 at
Bidwell to the late Ross and
Florence Glassbu_rn Sprague. He
married Emily Phillips, August
1952 In Toledo, and she suiVIves
along with one daughter, Glenna
Sprague, Chicago.
Funeral services wlll he Saturday, 1 p.m. McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, VInton with Rev. C. Sonny
Zuniga and Rev. Woodrow Bell
officiating. Burial In Vinton MemorIal Park. Friends may call at
Thursday, Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home, Mlddleport 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Visitation Friday at
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home 3 to 5
and 7 to 9 p.m.

ENJOYING SUN - San Dlep Surfer Conway
Bowman soaks up a liUie Calllomla sunshine
TueM&amp;y afternoon under sumy '25 degree sides In the
community of Ocean Beach as a giant transplanted

Clriitmas tree stands tn

the rear. De giant tree Is
erected evecy ~ar by the.city and stuck in directly bt

New England, The Plains hit
with record lows; icy roads
By Unlled Press Intematlonal
The "Alberta Clipper" whisked'
eastward with a cargo cl snow and
cotd winds today, pushing temperatures to record lows and triggering
accidents on Icy roads from the
Plains to New England.
On the West Coast, tens of
thousands of Wet&gt;kday sun Worshipers worked on their Christmas tans
as temperatures In the !Kls Tuesday
flirted with record highs for a
second straight day in Southern
California.
At least seven people were killed
on roads made sUck by snow or Ice
Tuesday - two each In Minnesota,
Dllnols and Pennsylvania and one
tn Massachusetts.
The temperature dropped to 16
degrees below zero at Sau It St.
Marie, Mich., today, breaking by
one degree the record set In 1975.
Winds of up to 25 mph In the upper
Midwest pushed the wind-chUI
reading to 60 below tn Duluth, Minn.
The surge cl artie air and snow
from Canada, dubbed the "Alberta
Clipper" by forecasters, moved
east today Into West Virginia and
Pennsylvania.

Wind-whipped snow fell from the
Great Lakes to the Appalachians,
with up to 8 Inches predicted in
Ohio •.Pennsylvanla and Wisconsin.'
The National Weather SeiVIce said
blizzard conditions were possible
today in northeastern Ohio.
Up to a half foot of soow was
expected In Kansas, Nebraska and
Colorado, where Winds gusting to 50
mph were ex~ted to cause
extensive drifting.
In New York, flvestralghtdaysof
snow left Watertown buried under
40 inches of snow, closing roads.
Fred Sinclair, part &lt;M'ner d a dairy
company, said the snow slowed
down deliveries but that most
residents adjusted to the conditions .
"You've got to have that attitude
If you're stupid enough to Hve up
here," said Sinclair.
Frigid air numbelj the upper
Midwest Tuesday, breaking or
tying seven record lol&lt;&gt;l. Eau
Claire, Wis., endured a recordbreaking low of 21 below. It was 22 ,
below at Brainerd, Minn., the
lowest reading nationwide.
Citrus farmers In Florida wei·
corned this week's cold snap, which

.

dropped temperatures Into the 30s
Monday. The unseasonably warm
weather before the rold snap
Increased pest and disease control
problems and threatenro a decrease In fruit quality.
"The citrus trees were beginning
to think It was still rummer. They
needed bo be more dormant to
withstand more severe cold. This
cold snap wll help in that process,"
said Bobby McKeown, executive
vlce president of the Florida Citrus
Mutual.
Sunbathers took tot he beaches in
Southern California Tuesday to
work on their tans as temperatures
ooared near record highs for the
second day.
Tuesday's high of 82 degrees in
Los Angeles was only one degret&gt;
short d the record set in 1979 and 15
degret&gt;S above the usual high for
this time d year, the NWS said.
"It was excellent tanning
weather," said Grorge Merritt, a
lifeguard at Santa Monica Beach.
He estimated :aJ,(XX)peoplelined the
sand from Santa Monica to Marina
Del Rey . "That's a good weekday
crowd."

Moderate beer drinking said healthy

proces.._..d

~

Today ...sunny. High JO to 15.
West wind 15 to :aJ mph and gusty.
Tonlght. ..clear. Low zero to 5
above. Southwest wind 10 to15mph.
Thursday ... Increasing clouds.
High near :al.
Chance of snow.. near zero
percent today and tonight.. and ~
percent Thursday.
Extended forec1181
Friday through Sundii,V
Fair Frtiiii,V with Ouniesln
the northeast. Fair Saturday. A
chance of snow on Sunday. Hips 15
lo 25 Friday and Saturday.. and In
the 20s oa Sunday. Lows 5 1o 15
Friday and Satuniii,V.. and Ia the
teens on Sundii,V.

lhe sand. UPL

BALTIMORE (UP!) -A Johns would not reveal their drinking
Hopkins researcher says a beer a habits- reported.a slightly higher
day may improve your health by 2i rate of illness than was ex~ted,
percent over teetotalers or those said Stephen Push, a spokesman for
who imbibe stronger spirits.
Johns !lopklns Hospital.
"It's not absolutely clear whether
Push said researchers also calcuhealthy people just drink moder- Iated the expected amount d Illness
ately or It good health arises from in beer drinkers to see If the
C88e8
moderate drinking," Thomas apparent decrease in Ulnesses
""'
Turner, president of the Hopkins could be chance, "But they found
Alcoholic Beverage Medical Re· that there was a Clll'-ln-oni'Ten cases were procesaed In the search Foundation, said Tuesday. thousand posslbUity that It could be
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
"But one thing Is sure chance alone."
Seyler Tuesday night.
mooerate drinking does not have
Turner stressed that although
Fined were Bret Stokes, Hunting- any chronic ill effects. That's one evidence 1s mounting, iurther
ton, W. Va .. $49andcosts,speedlng; message that comes through quite research Is required before a
Tina Slater, Rutland, $.175 and clear," Turner said.
-definitive statement can be made
costs, drtving under the Influence;
A study of 8,(XX) people released about beer drinking promoting
Don E. Hood, Middleport, $113 and by the Hopkins ABMRF indicated better health.
costs, controlled substance; that moderate beer drinkers were
"It Is very Interesting and the
Rhonda ,Jewell, Pomeroy, $63 and lll25 percent less than expected.
results took quite clear. There ts a
costs, operating a vehiCle while
Wine drinkers were found to have great deal ri evidence accumulatunder suspension; Mathew 2 percent fewer Ulnesses than tng all rNer the Western World that
Weaver, Columbus, $63 and costs, expected and liquor drinkers had 1 moderate drinking Is associated
no operator's license.
percent less Illness.
with better health," he said. "The
Forfeiting bonds were Mary
Turner said It Is not yet clear why indications are that'certainly It does
Prince, $U; Robert Smith, Sr., beer seems-to be beneficial, but seem to be as~clated with better
Pomeroy, $46; Phillip Burton, noted that beer does mntain health."
Mason, W. Va., $43; David Hanson, minerals and vttamtns.
Turner said moderate drinking
Pomeroy, $49, all posted on speed- - 'I'hrEeothergroups-abstalners, was determined by a person's
lngcharges; EugenePhllllps, Jr., lhooe who drank a variety of wetght,glvingasanexamplethree
Albany. $43, stop stgn violation.
alcoholic beverages and those who . beers for a 15(). pound person over a

}0

Wednlllday, Decem~r 18, 1985

TI. Dally

Oh~

6 Lost end Found

24-hour period.
"A 110-pound woman silting next
to a 190-pound man should not drink
the same drink that he does," he
said. "Translatro, If you take your
weight In pounds and divide by lllt
gives you in terms of ourres of Ellproof whiskey the upper limits that
one should drink In 24 hours.
Even If further research does
show beer promotes health, Hopkins scientists said that should not
encourage abstainers to begin
drinking nor justify beer consumption In aU circumstances. Some
drinkers risk alcoholism, es~lally
if there Is a history of alcohol
misuse In the family. · ·

MlllTiage lioonse
A marriage license has been
Issued In Meigs C~nty Probate
Court to Stoney Lee Johnson, 22, .
Langsvute and Michelle Dawn
Bearhs, 19, Pomeroy.

Mother's
LITTLE
Helper:

,4,,,.,.

COMPACT
MICROWAVE OVEN

•

Found : puppy In Laurel Cliff
area . Black andwhito Beegle
type. epprox . 8 wkl old . Call
614 -992-5819.
Loot Collla .. Crab Creek
Rood area. Reword! A"!
information . name
"Cooper", 304· 676· 1404
or 304-876-3978 ,

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

13 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME
on 3 lots in Sy11cuse.
OLDER HOUSE willr 3 bedrooms on comer lot in Syr-'
cuse.

HOME NATIONAL

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Garage

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New Homes luilt

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PH. 992·5682
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Onl1 $55,000.
RUSTIC HILLS - Modern 6
rm. one floor plan. Woodburning unit, 3 BRs, carpeting, foyer, utility, storage &amp;
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MODERNIZED - Pomeroy,
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$27,500.
' BUILDING LOT- Overlooking Po~roy &amp; the Ohio
River with garage and storage.
BARGAIN - 2 BR one fl.
carpeted home ·il Middleport. Gas heat, bath, etc.
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WIRING NEEDS

Residentill &amp; Commercial

Call:

992·5875 Or
742-3195

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'116'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36' ·
Insulated Do&amp; Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS·
P~.

8-8-tlc

CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp; PINE CONES
FOR WREATHS

COMPLETE LINE OF
FARM AND AUTO

BATTERIES

AGRI BOSS

POMEROY - 1\\ story
frame on two lots, 3 bedrooms, fully insula!~. electric b.b. heat &amp; pa!Q. $17.000.
Neary E. Cltl11td, Jr.
992-6191
Jun Trumll 949·2660
Dottle Turner 992·5692 ,
Jo Hill 915-4466 .:·

12 VOLJ.6 VOlT

3 YEAR WARRANTY

$3995

ALL SIZES IN STOCK

No quorum

MGM Farm City

Monday's regular meeting of
Pomeroy VUiage Council was
cancelled for lack of a quorum.

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

'-1

Service Station

I
'

MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
home on quiet street, 3 bed·
rooms, garage &amp; patio area.
$19,900.00.

'

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

RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER SERVICE . Eotete,
farm. antique, liqukledon
ulea. Llconood Ohio and
West Virginia . 304-773·
5785 or 304-773-5430 .

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

1·13-tfc

TOWN &amp; COUN11Y
VETEIINAIIAN

CUNIC

•R•nga•

Paul f. Shockey, DVM

•Refrigerators
•Dryera •Fruzere
PARTS and SERVICE
4-SHc

Pl. PlEASANT OFFICI
305 Jackson An.

'

.YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
, SERVICE
- Plumbing 1nd electrical
work

(Free Eotlmatool

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Racine, Oh.
614-Ul-5191
10·6-ttc

~

z

10-8-tfc

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearinc Aid Selection
Heannc Evaluations For All A&amp;es

LISA M. KOCH, M.S. ·

HA•IY HANING

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

~ ·Licensed Clinical Audiologist

%

-

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

119ft!
11-26-1

8-13 tfn

RENT A'CAR
ALl

THE TAXIDERMY SHOP

f

2 LOCAtiONS

44 ·4522

New lima Rd.

"Wt R111 F11 lUt "

Rutland
742-2225 or 742-2771

U-SAVE
-AUTO

7111 /tfn

108 Vine St.
. Gallipolis
446-9244

9:00 A.M. • 6:00 P.M. llantlay·Solurday

RENTtL

St. Rt. 160 ,,..
talllpelle, ~I•

-

A1111 uun ~c me 111s
3 Announcements

2 mole kltteno. Coli eltor
6PM , 814-446-7137 .

Han Your Trophy Mounted ly,A
Full Tlmt Taxidermist

Chicken• heevy braad rooltor. Coli lOAM til 4PM,
614-379-2t44 .

Clwt;tlf QIIDtg, N•t Pll~l

Ador1ble Chriltmat puppies . Clll614-245-5888 .

' SINGlE S24.95

olive entert1inment
'Free HBO •Restaurant
.Olympic Pool

U.A.
304-61~·1&gt;'11

THE

IIOUNTIY ,
,;~~
KWI
.
GoH
£4uipmtnt

' :

Now . . . ., •• suo.
.... . . ... ·-·$6.00 ...
•Now

a Prior OW.Id Clubl

.CUitOift

c....

.,_.,., .,,.,hiM
Youth Club&lt;
•lho•

CNittr, Olllt •
IZ-11-1 mo.

Port-time . Must be 21 . All
ahift1 and weekendt . Coun~
try Corry Out, 581 Upper
River Rd .. GoiHpollo.

Euy Auambly Workl
1600.00 per 100. Gu1ron·
toed payment . No
experiance~No ules. Detail•
send telf - addreaaed
111mpod envelope: ELAN
VITAL·5847 3418 Enter·
prise Rd. Ft. Pierce. FL
33482.
Euy

Auombly Workl
eeoo.oo por 100.Guoron·
toed Poyment . No
EJCPerlence-No Soleo. Da·
tells oond oolf· addrooood
otampod onvlfope: Elen VItal -716 341B Entorprlu
Rd. Ft. Pierce. FL 33482.

Buying dolly gold. llltver

8E1 A PART OF THE NEIGH·
BOAS HELPING NEIGHBORS TEAM I Join the Army
Narional Guard end you
have 1 good part-time
career -- good benefits -·
monthly p.vcheck -- NO
LAYOFFS . Coli 304-11753950 Of 1-800-842-3519.

11

Semi Drivers
yean ower ~ad
1 year fle1 bed,
older . Phone
9391 .

W1nted, 2
experience,
23 yaers or
304-273 -

22 Money to Lo•n
HOME OWNERI·Rolfnllloo
to low filed rete. UeaaqUity
lor any purpoao. Lttdtt
Mortgage Co.. 814-111123051 .

12

Situations
Wanted

18 Wanted to Do
SHIMch ,window In pl11tlc .
Prevent heat lou during the
coming winter. Bill Sl1ck,
814-992· 2269 .
Will do odd jobs. Cell
304-875-24t9 .

PHONE 992•7075

m~36°48. •r

--------------·
Piano Tuning. Lllno Don loll.
614-742-2951. Also: l!•by
Gt'llnd Pleno tor ule. FI'IHI
dlllvory 1nd tuning.

· Piano tuning ond repoir, tune
up lor tho holldoyo, lfiiQ!II
discount. W1rd'o KoybollfCI.
304-875 · 111100 or 87113824 .

Rt!&lt;il f s t.; le
31

Homea for Sal•

By owner. Mu11 Hll·moved.

3 bdr. ranch,onacarpr...,,
walking dlttance from NOtth
Gattis High School. Roduljfod
to 129,900 . Coli 814-3118·
8711 .

''

Smell 2 bedroom houot.' 8
milo• south of G1lllpollt.
Priced by owner for quick
ulo. Now wolf to ·.r111
carpet . rural water, et.e.llc
and out building. From Gill·
polls go down river on At,,7,
turn right on Rt. 218, thin
about 2 miles or flrat rMct
right to Kriner Ridge Rood. 1
few hundrad feet on Kr~
to first house on right. Cllt
814-448-2917.
'•
3 bdr. llory loi, lull boeament, fuel oil heot.llropiiCI,
'h ocre. Contenorrv. c\lv
water. C1lt 814·448-3044.
Beautifully dacoroted 3 b_l!r.
homo, now ptu1h Clrpltl~g
&amp; coordinating windOW
treatment•. country o•k
both, nice friendly nolghbo!r·
hood. Call 814·288·81 10
for further dotolfo.
' '1
4 bedroom houea lor ~.
flraploce, 3 mi. south of
G111ipollo. f32,500. Clrtt
doyo e14- 441 -1815 .lor
nlghll 614-4411-1244. :·
3 bdr.. 1'h beth, l1m'iiV
room. 3'h mllu oot 81. Jilt.
5881n GrMn Townohlp. C,O
81 4-268-87B9 or 114-211·6205 .
··-.
Government Honao from t;t
(U-ropolrl, Alto detlquoat
tax proparty. C1ll 805-118'78000 Ext. G H-41112 for
lnlormltlon. ·
By owner. Remodeled 3
bedroom hauM On At. 33.
Now F.A. fum-. tlrga tot.
123.000. Coll..l 814-4238289.
By owner. Statlfy, 3 bed·
room houM at 10 E. St. In
Pomeroy. 5 wooded ocrn,
l•mlly room, dlni"'J rodlll,
F.A. heat, 2 botho, batpment . g1r1ge. 127,0qo.
Collect 814·423·8289. •

&amp; room houM Mar Pom•ov
lor 11ft Of rent. Call 51 4·
982 -3875 lor oppolntm"\'f'·

Why r~nt when you oih oiitn .
thlo 1 bodrooom houoa ~In
Pomeroy lor 15000 . 00
coth. Coli 1114·982-1171
evH.

,,

In Middleport. 11-1 IIOI"f
brick - r lmporllf Electric,
lull boMmont, lllngle 4lr
fllrlgo, co,..lot, F.A. htl!lll,
t18,000. C1ll 814-7(2·
2027.
,,

''

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

We WI•• All Our
Cu.tom.r• • Merr"
Chrlst11u ••• AHt~n
New Y11rl

Profeaional
Servlc11

•a.ooo.

Voconcy lor lhe oldorly In
our home. Tr1inod 1nd fifOno certHied Modica! Tech· teen y11ra experience. Call
nologllt. weekdays. Send 814-992-73t4.
rooume "' opply to Medical 1- - - - - - - Pioll, 203 Jackson Pike,
Goltlpollo , Oh 411631 .
AVON Sell Avon PlY Chrillmu bill1, limited time start
upfoo· FREE . Call814-4463368.

23

DISTRICT SALES REP.
needed by one of South'a . Exterior complett·lnterior
lergoot. lutolt grownlng ready to compteta. All brjQit
home menufae1ur••· Mu1t energy efficient, three bid·
hovo a knowledge of con· room ronchor. 11111"11 onotructlon and p10k1ged fll · tcro . Prloed on lnopect'-'t
nellzed houolng. Atso, fl. only . Clll 304-1178-2981,-,
nanclng and mortgage
bonking prolorr~ . Send re- HOUII 313 7th Stroot lit.
P1eeean1 .
con 304IUml and phone: Ken Cock·
orhlm, P.O. Bo• 490B. 11711·4837.
Mo-tlnov~le. V1 . 24115.
I room houu in town, nice
Baby lllttor lor 2 omoll locetion, force-d air furnaqt,
chlldron in Christian Home. l1rgo lot. 132.500. Owner
Rt. 2. Point Plouont, phone financing ovoil1bla. 304175-1090.
'"
304-675· 51 81 .

Help Wanted

Noodod oomoono with bockhoe to open gravel It Ohio
'--------~,----..:.:o.:.o;..:;;;;;...ll 4 puppies to glvo owoy. ,Volley Mambry Gardena opprox. 80 openings per ye1r .
814 992
Coli 614·1192·6151 collect
-to -go_. - - -- - lor write P.O. Box 729,
Aio• planra to give 1way. Athena. Oh 46701 .
catt614-742 · 24B8.
Llbr1ry Duk Aul111nt
6 kittens to give away. 4 Working knowledge of fie·
'
months old . C1ll 614-742- don, non-fiction and child rani bookl. panicularly cur·
2418
.
rent titles. Fomlflarlty with
Puppies, mixed Gtrmln Po- bulc relar.,ce tootuuch 11
.
,.
J
lice and Hulky, 304-896· Gronger'o poatry index, an011
5 00 304 cycfopedlll, 1ttoeao, Who's
'
- who 'o IIC. Must typt ICU·
rotlfy minimum ol25 words
Cots to 1 good home, per minuto . Ia 1ble to run
18mm pro)actor, photocop·
304-878-39154 .
11 -29-85 1 mo. pd.
lor, mlcrollcho ,.dlr, t6
2 femole CIIICo kittens. ond 38 mm microfilm reid·
mothlr Cit ylflow stripped , 111 and printers. Knowledge
of bu• rnoiHng r1111 and
304-875· 7e78 '
ruill helpful. Knowledge of
Puppies to give 1woy, '3 04- A.L.A. filing rul.._ Abltlty to
8711-1248.
work wkh the public under
varloua conditions. Ability to
t2 wooko old bltck lo1111ie wortc wtth~ndcommunlcate
Llbtldore Ret river . 304· Ofolly 1nd written with faf. ·
low employ•• ond tuporvl8711·2249 .
oor. Ev.,lng 1nd wool!ond
hours 1 mull . 8terting 11 t1ry
all4.80 per hoUI. AbHityto
II Lott and Found
operate nwnu driven computer pr011r1m with two
filM. Uoe of bor code wand
Loot : Btock Pit Butl. helpful. For appointment
lulevllle-Addloon Rd. vlcln· CIH 448 -READ Bouard Lf,
tty. CIIII14· :MI7·0441.
brary. No Studlnto.

t
t

Houaelceeper &amp;: cook. Call
614 -448· 7763 .

ASK THE · ARMY NA ·
TIONAL GUARD RE ·
CRUITER ABOUT VACANCIES FOR QUALIFIED
PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE
INDIVIDUALS . Port-tlma
(obo with lull·tlme benoflll.
Coli 304-876-3960 or 1·
800-842 -34119.

r

6 puppies 7 weeki old,
mother port Huskey. Coil
814·446-2203 or 61 4-4481836.

Holiday Inn of G111ipoll1 now
accepting applicetiona for
employment at n1cept deak.
Typing. balllc math skills.
communication with public.
Apply In peraon. No phone
colloll

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bodo. Iron,
wood, cupboarda, chelra,
cheata. baakatl , di1he1,
atone jars, entiques. gold
ond oliver . Wrlu -M . D,
Miller, Rt.2, Pomeroy. Ohio
45769 Of cell 614-9927760 .

w1re, old coina. l~rge currancy. Top pricel. Ed . Burkelt Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
Mlddt
Dh 614 992
aport,
·
3476 .
-------STANDING TIMBER . AI
·Tromm . Coli : 614- 742 ·
Racine Gun Shoot opon- 2 3 2 Bsorod by Racine Gun Club. Buying Row Fur. BHI and
Every Sundty, beginning tt
Door hides. Selling -trapping
1:00 p.m. Foctory Choko12 aupplie1. Wheat and nite
guaga shotguns.
titoo. George Buckley. 614664-4781. Houro:1 2·9p.m.
The fzoek Walton Club will
have their munel loading Wontod:old pl1noo. Poying
primitive wu pona ahoot1 $20. &amp; 140. each . First floor
Sundaya, December 22nd.
Write giving directions.
29th end January 6th. Sllrt· only.
Witten Piano•. Box 188
lng time lor ooch dote: 1 :OO· Sordlo Ohio. 43948 . Phono
p.m . No acopa1 permiHed .
Priua-blcon, turkey and 614-483-1806.
C81h. Shoou will be bench -P-In_o_po_ll_on_d_r_o_il_lo_g__-F-or
1
ond off-hond . Located 3'h
milea south of Cheater on prtcaa or for information ,
Shade River Rd .
llop by or coli 814-6876715, 8 to 5 Monday thru
·
Fridly . Soturdly 9 to 6.
Special Notice , singles. Locoted Twp. Rd . 313!Rice
meat thet apeciel peraonl R R
T
Call or write for tpplicetion,
un oed) upper• Plaint.
Personal Touch Introductions. 304· 744-4486, P. 0 .
ri1 1Jiuymr,nl
Box 8638 . Chart..ton , W.
Vo . 25302.
St!rv1ce~

Giveaway

R N, part-time. Sat l!o Sun ..
Send reau me to Box T•
6060, Cara of Gallipolis
Dilly Tribune, 826 Third
Avo .. Gafllpolia, Ohio
46831 .

Christian plano plovar fOf
" Reflactlono" Goopel SingIng Trio . -Call Evelyn Roush
at 304-773-5633 or 304882-2049 11tor 5:00p.m.

SWEEPER and sewing machine repair. porto, ond
tuppUea.
Pick up end
delivery, Dovio Vocuum
ct.. ner, one hell mile up
Georgu Crook Rd.
Coli
--::8_1--::4-_44_8_·_02_9_4:. ___

4

leaders en Contumer Finan·
cia I SeN ices. lmmedlete op·
ening for quelified Individual
interuted in coniUmer fi·
nanciel aervices- Consumer
loans , home mortgage•. in·
aurance Hies, credit cards,
and general office adminiatration. Succea1ful candidate wilt be ••tf·motivated,
like challenging work. hove
good communications 1kill1,
intelligent, aggreativ• and
able to abaorb and opply
comprehen1iile training pro·
gr ems to perform auccesa·
fully in credit, sales, collecttona and a(fminiatratlon.
Competitive aalary commensurate with experience
and excellent benefita. If
intorooted, 0111 614-446 2786 and all&lt; lor Mr.
Clatwonhy for your career
interview. Beneficial of
Ohio, Inc. of 416 2nd. Avo ..
. Olllipolio, Oh 46631. Equel
Opportunity Employer M·F .

Wonted to Buy: Standing
1imber 8&amp; pulp wood. Con·
tact Alvin Johnson 614387-7410 .

coin•. rings. jewelry, atarling

fiiUE. STREAK CAB C0:-1 _:;_;~y-·
IT. 62 SOUTH
POINT PIUSANT, W. VA.
8 miles from
Pomeroy-Mason Brid&amp;t

WANTED TO BUY uoed
wood &amp; coal heaters .
SWAIN'S FURNITURE, 3rd.
&amp; Olive St. Gallipolis. Coil
614·446· 3169 .

TOP CASH paid lor '83
model end newer uaed cars.
Smith 8ulck·Pontiac, 1911
Eastern Ave .. Gallipolis. Coil
614-446-2282 .

992-621 S or 992-7314
12-8-tlc

We fiiV 011h for loto model
claen used Clrt.
Jim Mink Chev.·Oid•lnc .
Bill Gene Johnton
614-448-3672

HOUI~

10-14-ttc

Pomeroy, Ohio

Wanted To Buy

Man.-Wotl.·l'hvn, 3·5 pm
TutS. 6,30·1; Fri. I·2 pm
Saturday 10.1 I :30 ..
LAIGI ANIMAL &amp;

PH. 304·675-2441
BEND AIEA CALL
· Ripley OHict
For Hours
304-372-5709

- Conc:rece work

9

Went ro buy, pipe or culvert
3·4 h . diameter. Coli 814·
388-986t evenings.

SUIGIIY IY APPl.

- Abdon• and remodeling
- Roofing 1nd gutter work

i

JOIN 11APOID
,.

Indoor Flee . Market. Every
Sot. &amp; Sun, 8-5 . Routes 36
&amp; 160.

•Weaher1 •Dishw•ahen

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992·3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOil
FILL DIRT

Public Sale
8o Auction

RftJC111
We can repair and re-

~ sERVICE

PRE-CUT TR_EES
AVAILABLE

992-2259

POMEROY - In town plus
elbow room. Neat split level
home with 3 bedrooms, din ·
ini room, I.a. electric with
heat pmp, central air, storage building, on a 2.36 acre
tot. $61,900.00.

8

•

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

11'12/lk

Wat&lt;h for

MIDDLEPORT - Nice Ill
story home on double lot &amp;2
bedrooms, in good neigh·
borhood. storage building,
garden space, in good condition. $29,900.00.

Ohio 4S76D

SALES &amp; SERVICE

2 Mi. from flu l'tinfl

RIGGSCREST ADDITION Beautiful newer split foyer
home in a great neighborhood plus an in-ground
swimming pool. Very a«ractive &amp; in Kreat condition!
Owner wants offer!

Eatlma1tea

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp;

J&amp;F

Flatwoods ld, Co. ld 26

POMEROY- Rt. 33- Cozy
2 bedroom home on approx.
9 acres, mostly wooded for
hunting, house has been remodeled w~h nice kitchen &amp;
bath. Econom ical gas heat. 5
minutes from town. Asking
$30,000.00.

Battery Sale

OHLY

. E. M•in
POMEROY,O.

Ph. (6141 .43-5425

SMAIL A,_AL

IISIDENa

601

Moving Out of Sta1a Sekl .
Furniture, odds &amp; enda,
17th, 18th&amp; 19thonly. 197
Kelton Rd .

' 11·1Zo2 mo.

3-24-tfc
•Complete Remodeling
*Room Additions
•Roof in&amp;
•Siding
•G•rages &amp; Pole
Buildings

Sale

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked In home 1rea
20 veers
"Free Eotlmataa"
CALL COLLECT:

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

SIDING CO•.

Va~d

-----Giiiifiioils-- -----· ·
&amp; Vicinity

VINYl &amp; AWMINUM

SPUT LlVR HOUSE w~h 3
~~~- 2 ~baths,
111nnrc room, livira room 1nd
. lqt IICitllion room. LoCIIId on 8 ICnS. 1M11 fm
fiO!ld. R1clne ...,

Real Estate

7

EUGENE LONG

Real Estate General

MICROWAVE OVEN

• WY DW. TIMER riM ~juttabte MltlnQIIO
20 mlnUitt.

1

Cuatomer repraaentatiYe, be

AlSO

• 500 WA TTl Of COOKINQ POWI!R COOks In
just V:J thl convtntlonat time.
• Dl,.geT CONTROL 1!\lwt trOlfln lood

Help Wanted

IIIOCilted with one of the

Hou stng
Headqu&lt;JriPrs

Save space and cook fast with the
Amana Compact Microwave Oven .
h'sllghtwelght and just tile right size
for a den, dorm room, motor horne
or smallepanment. You get these
"big oven" value features:

11

Government Job1 t1 8,040'59.230 yr. N- hiring .
Call 805-887-8000 Ext. .R·
4882 for cunentladarlllfll.

'

Area deaths

Fn00e8 R. Hudson
"'

'

WASHINGTON tUPI) ~Senate­
House conferees working on a
,·undtng bill to keep the government
running have agreed to Include a
directive that would give priority
consideration to the replacement ri
the bridgethatspans theOhioRJver
between Williamstown, W.Va., and
Marietta, Ohio, Sen. Robert Byrd
said Monday.
The 84-year-old bridge has been
- closed for safety reasons, creatlng'a
severe economic Impact on the
entire area, said Byrd, D·W.Va.
"The economies d WUilamstown
and Marietta are so closely relat~
that the closing of the bridge has
had a detrimental effect on both
C\lmmunttles," Byrd said. "ReplacIng the WUilamstown Bridge must
be a priority project."
The dlrecttve would tell the
Department of Transportation to
give top conslderatkm to a request
for replacement funds from IXYI"s
fiscal 19!Wi discretionary llrldge
fund.
Last week, officials from W~
and Washington counties met In
Washlnglon with federal officialS,
who reportedly told the group that
the Williamstown Bridge could not
be repaired and that It was on a list
of bridges to be . replaced. The
funding blil that contains the brldgr
directive Is expected to come before
the full Senate this week for final
action.

I

Ftllrlllet.il

21

Businesa
Opportunity

1---------

Rt. 2, Ashton. Arrlngtllf\
House. 3 bedrooms. \l'a
baths, modern kltcheft ,
baaement . 1 acre pi~.
priced In thl 40's, CIYf!o
Bowon, Jr., 304· 576- 23~~ -

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBiLE
HOMES KESSEL' S OUA~­
ITY MOBILE HOME 8ALEI,
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
RT 36 . PHONE 114·4411·

7274.
1982 Cloyton, 14X85, luft'f
furn ., washer, dryer, AC.
underpinning &amp; porch. h .c.
cond .. Meko on Offer. CWII
614 -256-1621 or814-25t.8315 .
1976 Richwood 14x60
pertly furn ., washer. dryet.,
exc . cond. Coil 814-4464851 or 614-3117-0397. ,~
1980 Llbet'\v 14.54, I
bedroom, unfurnilhed, winyt
und~rpinniniJ includedMull ootl. Coli 304-773'
6873.
. •

1981 12x66 2 bodroo111
I NOTICE I
mobile
home . Excellent con·
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO . recommends dltion. Must on to oppr¥1
that yoo do buolnou with elate. 17.9911 . Coli 81~
people you know, and NOT 992· 7278 .
to 10nd money tllrough thl
moll until you hove involll· . MOBILE HOMES MOVED!
iniUred. reaa0n1ble retell,
,fll
;_
lod
- the
_ oll
_e
_ r_
ln_g ._ __
Coli 304-678-2338
. ;•
•'
T-shin and cop printing
equipment . 4 -color printer. Double - wide on
convoyor dryer, exposing 100x235 , 3 bedrooms, II¥•
unll1nd CIP dryer. Like new Ina room , kl1chen;
condition. With oupplila . 132,000.00 1110 IIIII I~
Wltl troln f3,400. Coll904· 100x236 112.000.00. 11'4
Mopie St .. M11on, W. VM:
788-6847 .
ther 3:30PM .
Sm1ll engine• ult &amp; ropalr
bulllnou In Middleport lor 1980 Uberty 14xl4. 2 lr
ule. For more information unfurnished, vinyl under·
coH 814-892· 3092 or 814· penning Included. Muotllll.
304-773·5B73 .
992·3782 .

to1 -

�Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

The Daily

Wednesday, December 18, 1985

Wednesday, December 18, 1985

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

•

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

LAFF-A-DAY

t988 Vlndolo 1 2xll0, • •·
pando, 3 bedrooms, 1 l'l
baths. outbuHding, on Iorge
rtntol lot, •11.000.00 otter
6:00 PM . csll 304-S76·
3784.
Small one bedroom mobile
home. very good cond.
priced to ull ttll at
11 . 800 . 00 . 304 - 875 4154. '

33

Farms for Sale

Apple Grovo 100 ocrot,
Iorge bam 1 20x28. 1.300 ft
frontage on Jerry' • Rul'!
Road. 5 mllot from Goo·
dyear Plant . Mineral rights.
Want offtf. Clyde Bowen,
Jr; 304·1176·2336.
of land with watar and
electric, price reduced, 304·
675 ·2449 .

''What do you get a g.irl who
has everything? A mirror to
admire it in."

Business
Buildings

---------'
"
==::=======lr-=;:;::=;::=====:1
a.
t.

42 Mobile Homes

Small englnea sale
repair
buolnon In Middleport for

ule. For more Information

Aper1ment
for Rent

Lots &amp; Acreage

Nico 2 bdr, mobile homo
fum .. convenient loc11ion
on Rt. 7, wator paid. Call
814· 245-581 8.

1· 2 bdr. opt furniahod, oil
utiltles paid, no peta, tec.
dop. rent t360 mo. paid
inodvonco. Coli 814-446·
1385 after 5PM .

F)rm tor 1111: no houae, 2

2 bdr. t150 mo . pluo dop .
Coli 814-379·2436.

unk. Call614-379-2268 .

Upltalri turn. aptt. clean, no
peta, aduhl, utiltiea paid.
Rot . 1lo dop: required. Call
814-448· 1&amp;19.

~

Nico 2 bdr opt, 4 mlloo from
Qallipolil, IIOVO, rafrig .. a
water turni1hed ., 8200 mo.
No Poll. Call 614-448·
8038 .

l:tlrns, county water a. •ptic

12)(50 2 bdr, control oir,
now corpet, Choohiro. Call
Why poy double price? Wo 614·367·0221 or6t4-367·
'
ld big 4 bdr. Eorly Ameri - 7242 .
n Homeo '18,995 . Now
dol open. Call 614-888· One bdr, furnished, gu
fumac•· CA. patio w~h
11 .

'

awning. off t1ree1 parking,

i9

oecur~

ecrel, ell utiltiet near by,
on At. 554. Coli 814-367~13 .

41

light. nlco location

in city . Muat have referen·
coo a dopoait required. Coil
814·448-41 69.

Rentals
Houses for Rent

Apt. for rent in· Henderson.
WV, $125 mo. Cali 814-46·
9862 .

2 bedroom troller 1 2•85.
Aloo officioncy opt. Both

2 bedroom apertmentl .
Now Haven, WVa. Newly
remodeled. In town . 614992-7481 .

located on Roush Lane,

~nch atvte. nice 2 bdr.
1\Dmo. 2 full bltho. ~ bl.
tlom Wooh . Elem.. 1325,
rJf. roq . Coli 61 4-448· 3 bedroom . furnished.
Washer, dryer, awning.
:!.168.
1200. plua deposit and
~rnlahod houu. 241 Jock· utilities. No pots. Call 614·
11\&gt;n Pike. Gallipolio. •200 992-7479.
water paid, 2 bdr. Coli
2 bedroom, partially fur·
4(6-4416 attar 7PM .
niahod. f17&amp; per month plus
lo'!Jdr•• largo kitchen. nice 150 dopo~. Coli 61 4 ·992·
2394.
utility room, 1 car
$296 mo. Rot.
dop
r~uirod. Call 814-448 - Appllcotion now being token
lor throe 2 bedroom mobile
1'3&amp;8.
homos, 1176.00 per month,
.
Avoiloble Jon. 1. 1986. 1200.00 depoalt, no pota.
Completely rodocoroted, 3 Hud ICCiptod, coli 304bdr. home, nice lot, nice 876·3000 tMI 8 :00PM .
neighborhood, woll inau· 1----- - - - --

304-n3-

f""'·
.

lattd . Move in condition. 2 bedroom total electric.
Call 814-288-11110 tor
further dotoila. ·

1160 . 00 per month,
1100.00 dopoa~. no plio.
reference required, Rt. 2,

In Minersville by the Bulk
plant. 1 bedroom hou11.
Totol electric. Portially furniahod. 614·992·62t6 or
814-992-7314.

five minut11 from town, Hud

Pomeroy

Re~ntal.

accepted, 304 -875-3000
till6:00 PM.

1 - - - --'--- --

4 room

2 br troller In Pt. Ploooent
arao. •150 dopoalt; UOO.
por month. 304-876-1143
or 876-6714.

house , fu II beaement.
hooted gorogo, goa furnace. 1----- - -- Good locotlon. Ro01onablel2 br trailer in Pt .. Ploount
rent. Need references. WrHe 1r11. *1&amp;0 depo11t; *200 .
Bo• 729 L.
· per month. 304-67&amp;-1643
or 87&amp;·&amp;714.
6 room hou11, open gartge. - -- - -- - - In Alfred Cummun~ . Refer·
ences and deposit required. 44
Apartment
Cai1614-9B6· 3849.
for Rent

- - -- -- -- 1
Houae or apt. tor rent.
Furnilhed or unfurni1hed.
814·992·2381 doyoorl14992-8723 OVOI .
Houae for ,.nt in Pomeroy.
Cioll to town. U50.por
montf\ plut depolit. .Call
814-992-6130 aftir 4 p.m.
Modern 2 bedroom stone
home. gaa h11t. tireplece,
full beaement, "two car garago. Coli 814 ·992·7356
afttt 5:00 p.m.
4 bodrooma. wood burning
fireplace . No pete. Call
814-949-2263 .
Efficiency cotlago. 165.00
wook. utilltloo paid, phone
304-675 -3100 or 6756809 .
Two bedroom house tor rent
in Jericho oroa . Coli 304675-6483 after 6 PM.
Llrge housa and lptlrtment,
unfurnished . 304 · 676 1385.

Small houH near Beech Hill
School. 304-676-1900.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furnlohed. AC, cable, no city
uxn. beautiful river view In
Kenauga . Fotterl Mobile
Homo Pork . Call 614-448·
1~02 .

3 bdr. mobile home. all
utilitloa paid. no poll, aoc.
dip .. t425 mo. inadvanca. 2
bdr . mobile homo oil utiltiH
pold. no potaoec. dep. *341
poid lnodvonco. Call 814·
448· 1385 aftor &amp;PM .
2 bdr . fully furniahod.
12JC65, conv . lacttion.
Upper River Rd .. wotor paid,
uc. dop . required. Call
814-448-8858.
2 bdr. mobile home near
HMC. no palo, 1186 mo.,
water Included, f60 dep.
Call 614-448-3117 .
2 bdr . unfurn . 12•80.
waahor a dryer hookup. v.
milo pall HMC on Rt. 35.
Call 81 4 -446-4369 or 304675·9780.
3 bdr. mobile homo lor ront.
Call 814-448 -4263.

''

Modern 1 bdr apt. convenient location. no pets, Sec.
Oep. a Rolerenceo. Call
614· 446·20&amp;5 efter 2pm .

14•70 furnlahed 3 bdr •• 1 ~
bath, 1260 mo .. 641 3rd
Avo .• Gollipolia, Call 614446-3793.

Choohlro. Oh.
6828.

,

44

'tor Rent

call 614-992-3092 or 614·
992-3762.
'

36

64 Misc. Merchandise

. LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sof11 ond cholro priced from
f285. to $895 . Tables, $60
and up to $125 . Hide·• ·
bod a. U90 , and up to
1650.. oota bodo 1145.
Rocllnoro, •225. to $375 .•
Lamps from 128. 10 $12&amp;.
pc. dinottoo from $109 .. to
436. 7 pc. $189 and up.
Wood Ulble with six chairs
•286 to 1745. Dook •110
up to 1228. Hutches. $550.
Bunk bad complete whh
mettr..ses, $27.15 . and up to
f395. Baby bods, 8110 .
Ma"re"" or box springt,
full or twin. $83 .. firm. $73 .
and $83. Ouoon sots. 822&amp; .
4 dr. chests. $49. 5 dr.
cheota, •sa. Bod trome's,
·~O . ond 826 .. 10 gun · Gun
cablnota. $350. Goo or
electric ranges 8376 . Baby
mott••••••· s25 a
bod
tramoa 120. $25 , 11o $30,
king frame 1&amp;0. Good selec:
lion of bedroom ouiteo.
rockers. metal cabinett,
haodboarda $38 &amp; up to
•66 .

1982 ATC 110. ••c. cond.
Cali 814-446·21 17.

us.

for 181e or trade, five ecret

34

61 Household Goods

Effenciency apartment. 2
rooma, bath. full boumont .
Furnished. In Pomeroy
above Krogero . 814-9926216 or 614-992-7314.
5 room unfurniohod opt. C•li
614·992·6434 or 304·882·
2566 .

1 or 2 bedroom apts. Utili·
1110 Included. •,210. pluo
depoa~.

6t4-992-7177.

APARTMENTS . mobile
homes, houtet. Pt. Pleasant
and Galllpollo. 61 4-448·
8221 .

2 br apartments in Handeraon . 304-87&amp;-1972 .
Nice 1 end 2 br apartments
downtown . 304-675 -2218
• 8-8
.
46

Furnished Rooms

For rant Sleeping Rooms
and light houM keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call614·446-0758.
Houtekeeping ,.,om, range,
refrlg.. there bath, mala
prefened. utilitie1 pd. 8126.
Call 448-4418 after 7pm .

48

Space for Rent

Used Furniture .. Dresser, a
bad . motel office desks. 3
miles
Bulaville
9am toout
5pm,
Mon .Rd.
thruOpen
Sat.

814-446-0322
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wathen. dryers. refrigerators, rongea. Skaggs Appliancaa, Upper Rhter Rd .
beoldo Stone Croot Motel.
814· 448-739B.
County Appliance. Inc .
Good uud appliances and
TV aota. Opon SAM to 8PM .
Mon thru Sot. 614-4461 899, 627 3rd. Ave. Gailipolia, ,OH .
SWAIN
AUCTION a FURNITURE
82 Olivo St .. Gaillpolia. New
&amp; used woad-coal stoves, 8
pc wood LR ouito 1399.
bunk bodo $199, ontron
reclinere 899, new &amp; used
bedroom aultea, ranges,
wringer washers. 8a shoes.
New llvingroom suites
$1 99 -t699 , Iampo, aloo
buying coal &amp; wood stovea.
Cail814-448· 3159.
64 Misc. Merchandise
Firewood-cutup slabs, 1
truck load $100, 2·t180.
Pickup lood. you haul lt5 .
HEAP accepted . Call 6t4245-5804.
Houae coal. Lump &amp; stoker.
Zinn Coal Co. Call 814 ·446 1408.
Coilahan 'o Uud Tire Shop .
Over 1,000 tires. sizes12,
13, 14. 15. 16.16.5. 8miles
out Rt. 218 . Call 614-2&amp;8·
625t .
Firewood 140 PU load doli·
vered .
ft . landscape
timbers $4.60 ee .,8 ft. scoth
pine live X-mas trees balled
• burlopad $3,2 ,,50 ea ..
Mulch. Call 61 4- 446 -1799
doya or 614-448-9646 after
6pm .

a

Chri11mas Trees. RodneyBidwell Road. 1 11. miles
from' Rodney. Call Fisher:
814· 246-&amp;246.
1981 Hondo CR 80 , good
cond., 1400. Single aizo
hollywood bad, with mat·
treu &amp;: box aprlngs. White
French Provincial headbo1rd
540 . Call · 814-448 -9308
after 4PM .
Firewood, hardwood, split,
llackod and delivered. A
vary Iorge ioed, $35 . Coil
614·446-7993 or 81 4-446·
8635 .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

r-------~------------~

74

•soo.

~~==~=~~~==r~=;::~~~~~~

Lone Hope Chell. $76 .00,
304-675-599&amp;.
BIG MOVING SALE. 10D6
Simpson Place, everything
gotl, living and bed room
furntiura, 18Wing machine,
desk, antique Grandfather•
clock. 304-876-3108 .

noo

EVENING

•

One year old female regis·
torod Beagle , 304· 676 ·
79.3 7.

Largo round balot of hay 120
ea. Coi1614-448-1052 after
&amp;PM .
,

76

Mixod hay for sale. $1,00
per bale . Robinson Farms
614-986-3829 . •

John boot for aale. Call
814-256·6417.

Musicel
Instruments

Wurlltzer Spinet piano, top
cond.. priced to ooll. Call
814-446-8560.
Kimball conoole plano excellent condition, 1800. Call
614-448-4203 .

Baldwin Overture Organ Fun
Machine Sorlea 12, 000 .
304-675-2965.

58
&amp;

Fruit
Vegetables

Hay

&amp; Grain

64

Top quality conditioned
mixed hay. S1 .30 par bole.
Coli 614-949-3059 after
5:00p.m .

(!) Mazdo Sportal.ool&lt;
lll3·2 ·1. Contact ICC)
(jj)Poworhouoe
• Dlffnont Strokes
IHBOI MOVIE: 'The Secret
of N.I.M.H.'
6 :05 I]) Andy Griffith
6 :30 Dill l1l NBC Nows
(]) Groen Acroo
(!) NBA Today
Ill • IDl ABC Newo
, Ill ([J I]JI CBS News
([J Doctor Who
. l]j) Body EleCtric
•Tul
6:35 CIJ Carol Bumon
11:00 8 (Il PM Magazine
Cll Courtahlp of Eddio'o
Fothor
(!) SportaCantor
Ill Emortllinmont Tonight
Interview with James Tavlor.
(!)Dill Whool of Fortune

Big aize appltl mountain
grown, eight verietiea. Truck
load. oranges, Navel, Tangelos. Grapes. Banan11. Open
7 rloyo~ 8:00 to 5:00. Jack's
Fru~ Mkt. Rt. 36. Hondor·
oon .

Building Supplies

59

Building Material•
Block. brick. sower pipeo,
windows . lintell , etc .
Claude Wintera, Rio Grande.
0 . Coi1614-246-512t .

For . Sale or Trade

Will trade a 1970 12x60
trailer in fair cond •• for a PU .
1978 a up with low mileage
1lo good cond. Call814-3870312.

1- - -- - -- --F"r111 Supplir.s
&amp;

Liv tst ot;k

71

Autos for Sale

1977 Pinto wagon. Coiifornia car no Nit, new tires.
Call 61 4 · 288-6622 .
1972 VW Super Bootie.
Honda ATC 18&amp;, both good
cond .•
each. Call
814·2&amp;8-93&amp;0 after 5.
1981 Monte Carlo loaded.
43.000 mllea . Call 614256 · 1444 or 304-675 1328.
1 973 VW Super Bootie good
cond. Call814-448 -3028 .
1983 Plymouth Turiomo.
2.2, 5 apd, 42,000 miles .
Coli 614-448-7414 after
4pm .

61

Ferm Equipment

CROSS a SONS
U.S. 35 Well, Jackoon.
Ohio. 614-286-6451,
Molloy Forguaon. New Hollond. Buoh Hog Saiaa &amp;
Service. Over 40 uaed tractor• to choose from &amp;
compteteline of new 8a uud
equipment. Lorgeot oolectlon in S .E. Ohio .

Building supplies. {J00)4x4
inch 12to16 ft. oak timboro.
Morgan'• Woodlawn Farm ,
304·676 · 1286 or 304-5235843 ovonlngo .
Pets for Sale
66
---------

Boats end
Motors for Sale

BORN LOSER
I

81

5A'i l ~T L.l ~ ~ I!FtCUOLI
-=ct.JFFL.§ ...I ~'( ~ID "WHAT,
A "'-" 11\%
SP'IC(0LI ,.,_...,..
••I'

DIDI.l'T

1 98&amp; Codilloc Doviho. 4
door. completely equipped,
eXcellent condition. front
wheel drive. t1 4,000. Call
614·985-369&amp; or 614-986·
3594.
79 Cadillac Fleetwood
Brougham 1 owner. good
cond. block brown metelic
w~h luther Interior. Soo ot
32 Warwick Rd .. price
U.&amp;OO . Call 304· 8762664 after '7PM .

Jividena Farm Equipment,
Year End Sale with 6 percent
Interest. Long Tractors, ' 76 Buick La Sabre, runa
Grain Barns, &amp;: full line of extra good, clean inside, ·
Agr. Equip. Complete line of 304-895· 3660.
Vermeer Hay Equip ., Round
Sole feedaro, •7B.OO, ' 64 Buick, 4 door, hard top.
Grinder mlxara. 3 pt . hitch 70,000 mllu, very good
· rotary tillers, 11 ft . teed · cond, $850.00 . Phone 304bunko $110 ., pool Driver 678 -2147.
f760. 8 HP Woodaplinora
1950.• Chock our pricoa on 1980 Chevy Monzo. 4 cyl.. 4
gotea 1lo Corral penaio, opeed. pretty good condl·
pickup racks, seeders, min· lion, oaking $1,150 . 304eral feeders, wheel horae 895-3013.
lawn mowers , wood
burnera. treeltandlng, fire- '86 Dodge Arlea LE. 3.000
plica inaerta &amp; furnace mlloo. AM -FM. AC. tilt
add-ona. Good ooloction of whool. crui11, '*9,000.00.
used tractors &amp; other u1ed Phone 304-875-2979 otter
equip. Call614-448-1675. 5 :00.

;;::=;;::=::;:::::;=;::==

•Jetteroono
CIJ Mary Tyler Mooro
D ()) All Now Lilt's Make
li 0..1
Cll PI-e Don't Eot Dololeo
ill Collett llllkotbllll: In·
d - et Loulovlle
Ill Naw Newlywed Game
(!) Dill Jeopardy
Ill Nlglrtly luolneao Ro·
port
(mJ Wltoel of Fortune
• IHl Price Ia Right
• WKRP in Cincinneti
[HBOl Not Noceosarily the
Newa This comedy series
p~esents sketches. news
and fMm footage satirizing
current e~tents .
IMAX) Headroom
7:3&amp; CIJ Sanford and Son
8:00 II ()) l1l Hlghwoy to
Hooven Working as assis·
tents with a professional
football team. Jonathan and
Mark discover that the star
player is hooked on pain kill·
ers prescribed by the team
doctor. 160 min.)
Cil Flipper ·
lll.llll The lnoidoro (CCI
Ill ffi @ Mary Mary's CO·
workers accuse her of being
too soft end polite to properly perform her job dutlea.
Ill
MacNoil· l.ahror
Newohpllr
(jj) River Joumevo: Tho
Murrev with Auooell Ired·
don (CC) Writer Ruasell
Brad don fonowa Australia's
greatest river from the
mountains to the sea. (f;)O
min .l
• MOVIE: 'Scrooge'
[HBOl MOVIE: ' Brookin' 2

ANNIE
WHAT MOE YOU
THIN~

111/ITY

WAS OUT
AIINIE

l.l THOUGHT
1 HfAfiCI HEll
C/11.£/N' PE-

l 12uess 1 w~s
Oflelllflll'.

COLEMAN WATER WELL ,
DRILLING
Pump ules, service. Regia·
terod in Ohio. All work
guaranteed . Coli 304-273·
281 1. Ravenawood. W. Va.

RINGLES'S SERVICE, ox·
perienced carpenter, electrl•
clan, mason, painter, roofIng (Including hot tar
application) 304-875-2088 '
or 675· 7368.

=""''·

Electric
IMAXIMOVI : 'llemolton
tho Night'
8:05 Cil MOVIE: 'The Amazing
Howard Hughes' Part 1 of

Stark• Tree and lawn Service.' londacaplng. 304-576·
2010.

2

a

(I) ® Foley Squoro AI·
eM ·s attempts to date a new
.man are. disrupted when she
is sent to Spanish Hartem to
convince a reluctant witness
to testify against an accused
murderer.
9:00 II Cil (!) Hell Town
(1) 700 Club
ffi . llll Dynasty ICCI AI·
axis and Oex are shocked to
see Joel dancing with Krys·
tie at a roadside inn, Rita
succumbs
to
Blake·s
charms, and Steven · and
Adam join forces to .save the
Carrington pipeline. (60
min.)'
ffi I]JI Kenny Rogers
and Dolly Parton: A Chriat·
moo to Remember Kenny
Rogers end Dolly Panon ex·
plore tho spirit of Christmas
in this holiday special. (60

B:30

Rotory or coblo tool driiHng.
Molt wells completed 11me
day.·Pump salllandt~rvice .
304-896-3802

Get your carpet In ship lhttpe
with Caprein Steamer, furniture cleaning-water damage
work. 304-87&amp;-229&amp; .
Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
GoiHpolla, Ohio
Phona 614-446-3888 or
614·448·4477

a

JIM'S PLUMBING a HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1, Bo• 366, Ciolll·
polis. Call 614-387-0678.

min.)

135 Maasey Ferguaon troc - l
tor runa good. clean , 72
Trucks for Sale
$2,950. 6ft. buoh hog good ' - - - -- -- - - - - - - 83
Excavating
$2,950 . Coil 614· 286 · , 6522 .
1972 GMC truck V·8, PS,
PB, long wide bad. prico
Good · 1 Excavating. baeeGravity box, auger driven, $850 . Cali 304-458-1997.
ments, footer•· drivewaya.
9rein Ieeder 1276.. buah
hog 1295 .. poll hole digger 1980 Chevy Luv f2,399. optic tanka, landacaplng.
$1 76., manure 1preader 1980 Ford Courrlor 11,999. Cill anytime 614-448 · •
f460. Call 61 4-2B8-6522. 1979 Ootoun t1. 799 . 4&amp;37. Jomot L. Doviaon. Jr. •
John'• Auto Sales, Bulavllle owner.
Late ModoiSN Ford tractor, Rd ., Galilpolla. Oh 45631 .
Dozer Work lend clearing, '
4 spd. cream puff, not used
hard, 4 new tirot. •1995 . 1981 VW dlo11l Rabbitt lJ( landscaPing, etc. Free utipickup, oir cond .. oterao, 50 mateo. Call 614-446-8038
Call 614-286-8522.
MPG. oxc. oond . • 2.900. or 814-992-7119 anytime.
(3) tobacco boler boxaa•65 . Call 304· 676·1286 or 304·
5 ft. buah hog 1300. To· 523-&amp;843.
86 General Hauling
bacco tticks 16 cent1 each . 1982 Chevy pickup truck, 6
2 row tobtcco setter
$1 ,400. A model lntema· cyl . pl. pb. olr cond. Call
tiona! with cultivator~ 304-273 - 6948 . .Leave James Boys Water Service.
t1 ,500. 28' tobacco pipo me11age.
Also pool• filled. Coli 81 4 ·
- 9- n- -C-h-evy
trailer. (300) 4"•4" • 12' 1·1
- -B-on-.-n-ze_h_a_
i f 256 -1141 or 814- 448 and 16' oak timber•. Home1175 or 614-448-7911 .
Uta chainaaw $100. Mor· ton pickup, AC, PB, PS • .
gen's Woodlawn Farm. 304- 53,000 mileo. 1978 Ford Ken't Water Service. Walla
6 7 5 • 1 2 8 6 0 r pickup, 304-875·4893 .
cisterns, poola filled. Phon~
1980 Chevy Cheyenne 4x4 81 4· 387-0623 or 614-387- ,
304·&amp;23·6843 .
7741 night or day.
570 GT dryer 500 bu. uc. trur:IC, looded 4" lift kit, 16
38.6 Iiiii, Ohort bod 350
cond . 14,200. 88 HP Doutz automotlc, 56,000. 19115 Waugh ' s Water Service .
4
0
600
10
troctor WD " •
·
Chevy 2 door ndan . Wolla, ciotorna. poolo. Fast.
HP Doutz 4WD 113,000.
rollablo aorvlca. Call 814Morgon ' a Woodlawn Form. •1300.00 . 304-882-2438 . 268 · 1240 or 814- 268 304-875-1288 or 304-623·
1 130. Reooonoble ratoa.
5843 .
73 Vans&amp; 4W.D.
Would llko to haul gravel .
1980 Ma11ey Ferguaon
und, fill din, oto. Call alter
80
CJ
·
5
JMp,
12,300.·
tractor, PS,ipin out whnls,
3, 814-446-7447
locldng dlfllrontal. 500 hra. franklin stove good cond .
17&amp;.
Call
514-367-7238
.
t7,000 .00. Phone 304·
Dump truck service will
578-2147 .
\
1979 JHp J10, long Whool deliver coal, llmes1o~ or
•
other. 304·876-3190.
bllt PU. quedro track, 380,
V· B. auto. AC. P8. PI,
63
Livestock
alidlng raar window, low
Upholstery
mliaago . 1978 CJ -S Golden 87
Eagle, V-8. 3 apd .. apoka
2 Reg . Sorrell quarter whuls, AM·FM tter.o, low
meret, 1 &amp; mo. old qu1rter miloogo . Coli 814-448 TRISTATE
co~. Call 814-288-81122 .
' 9700.
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
183 Sac. Ava .. Golllpolia.
Mono a colt for oale. Call 1888 Chevy plokup 4-WD, 1
81 4-4411· 7133 or 614-448114-388-9078.
full power optlono. loarlod 1833.
•
with oxtraa. 12.000 mi.
Block with charcoal interior, R &amp; M furniture Manufac64 Hay &amp; Grain
aoking en ,liOO. Coli 814- turing, St . AI. 7 , Crown .
- - - - - - - - 448-9364.
City, Oh . Coil 814· 2118- •
1470, coil Eva. 514. 448 • _
Hay for 1111. Callll14· 379· 1975 Joop CJ ·S. Ctll 814· 3438. Old 11o now
2424.
448-3175.
Uphollortd.

ffi

BARNEY

VEP·· I AIN'T HAD NOTHI~'
BUT ONE

pTTLE 01: NIBBLE

River Joumoyo: The
Murrev with Ruaooll Bred·
don {CC) Wriler Rusooll
Braddon follows Australia's
greatest river from tho
mountains to the sea. (60
min.)
(jj) Mark Ruaooll Comedy
Special Satirist Mark Rus·
sell dedicates irreverent
tunes to the country's personalities and pokes fun at
today 's newsmakers.
9 :30 Cil Top Rank Boxing from
Adantic City, NJ
(lD Comedy with Monto~h
and Rand (CCI
IMAXl MOVIE: 'Spitl'n lm·
10:00

·~-=-

I

(]

X) I

I RICKYTj
() (

ll
'TO GAI..I.. IF
YOI.I'II!E l'i.ANNIN6TO
6\V!! A !MNQI.Iei
FO~ 'ftlU~ GAT.

WHOM

Now anango tho circled lett,.. to
form the surpJIH antwtr, •• suogostod by the abM cartoon.

Answer heft: THE

•

r I I ]-[ XI Xr
{Answet's tomorrow)

,

YBBterday

1

1 Jumbleo: ANKLE YODEL DEADLY EITHER
Answer: What a cr.lmlnal who falls inlo cement

nao to be- A HARDENED ONE

attack ond Craig gets drunk
at an oid·fashlonod wassail
party. (60 min.)
ffi D IHl Arthur Hililey'o
Hotel (CC) A pregnant moid
illegally in tho Un~ed States
faces deportation, a young
woman romantically eyes a
mmionaire. and Mrs. Cabot's
father-in ~law returns for the
hotel' a 75th anniversary ce·
iebration. (60 ·min.)
D ffi I]JI Tho Equolizer
ffi Mark Ru11oH Comedy
Special Satirist Mark Russell dedicates irreverent
tunes 10 the country's per·
sonalities and pokes fun at

.,

SNAKE!!
GSe!!

MUSfUKe
M~!!!

.
PEANUTS
WHAT ARE WE 601N6
10 HEAR TODAV. MAKClE?

HANDEL'S ''MESSIAH •

T~E

MOST EXCITIN6 PART
15 WHEN TI-IEV6ET TO
THE 'HALLEUIJAH
AND EVERVOHE

Uncooperative
defenders

roday' a newsmakers.
(lD NrtWIWitch
[H81ll MOVIE: 'Goin' All
lhoW '
IMAX) :foviE: 'Thlngo Are
Tough All Over'
10:06 (l) Billy Grahlrn Crulldo
10:30 I]) Fitnou Magozlno
Ill Comedy with Montolth
and Rand CCCI
® Miroclo on Fort Street
.INNNIWI
11
.Cil11JI1lD([Jiii•IDl
NrtWI
I]) Man from U.N.C.LE

:oo

mEUI'Op8lll .1ourn11

(jj) Splendor of Gorrnlln

:i'i::v.HHI Show

NORTH

11·11·11

+AQJ6 ~

" 10 1 .
tKQJ8 7

+6

. Jameo Jacoby

EAST

WEST

My good friend Jeremy Fllnl was + Kg 12
+ 10 8 7 3
9154
declarer In today's club contract dur- • A Q 9 6
t A 10 43
ing the semifinals of Great Britain's ! + 6 5
+
10 3
team championship Gold Cup some : + Q J 9
months ago. On the opening lead of the ·
SOUTH
club queen, Flint deeided to allow the
...
opposition some leeway for error by
9K63 2
allowing West to bold the lead at trick
til
+AK 8 7 5 42
one. Instead of erring, the defenders
operated with complete precision to !'
Vulnerable: North-South
take the maximum number of tricks.
Dealer: Norlh
At trick two, West switched to dia· .
t ~~:.:/laying the six. East won the · weso North East Soul~
'
I·1
now
to make the key play.
I+ . Pass 2+
3+
Pass
He returned the jack of hearts. Re· Pass
Pass Pass
,member this play. When dummy has a Pass
· ·doubleton 10 and you are sitting over
Opening lead: • Q
·dummy, you might have to lead your
honor in that suit to take tricks quick·
ly. A low heart lead would allow dechirer to duck around to the A-Q in the the opening lead was the heart ace, . ·
West hand, butthe lead olthe jack left ·followed by subsequent misdefense, .
Jeremy Flint helpless. He covered ·which enabled the opposing team to
with the king and West quickly took make an overtrick in three clubs. Flint:
the A-Q-9 and then played the fourth might have saved a trick by winnln&amp;.
heart, which East ruffed.
.
the A-K of clubs right away, but be"
That was down two and an unfortu- was still destined to be set In his .
nate result for friend Jeremy since at contract.
the other table, on the same auction,
' '"'NEWSPAPER ENTERPIUSI All!&lt;.
,
1

.

.

2.

~IU/'7~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

41 Hyde
or Central

l Military
se ttin ~

.·.

DOWN
I ilalian

5 Caustic
remark

lake

9 Palm leaf 2 Assumed
10 Watchful
name
12 Rog
3 Cana affair

.
....
'

4 En~. prwt

13 Tire style
16 Paddh•
16 Plant
17 German
artide
18 C".ompa r·
ative

laureate
( I 7!Kl)
5 .Just about
6 Winged
7lllushing
8 Nickname
phrase
for Venice
20 Spanish II Cormpt
queen
14 .l arnh's
21 Ethereal
wile
22 Gypsy 23 - whiz!
24 Mtn.

Yesterday'• Anewer
16 Father
26 Sce ne
19 llearing
of act ion
22 Aller·
27 Progenitor
dinner
29 Tooth
r andy
30 Modify
24 Un·
34 Twain
common
36 Life (prof.)
25 Soliellude 37 Snake

·,
'•

.
..
'

'

..

rangE&gt;
26
27
28
29

in MoroC'&lt;:o
French r il y b-+-+llreathe
heavily
Fido's ery
One of the
C rat r hil~

3l Caddnan
Indian

32 Pay dirt.
33 Tn•••

'

36 Empower

'

37 Movie dog
38 One kind
of nu
39 Prophet

40 Civ il
wrong

DAILY CRYPJ"'QUOTES- Here's how to work II:
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

ir~ (!) St.. Elaewflero A ·
Santa Claus suffers a heart

°

--------

I TAUID ·I (j
I I I.
I LEWNY
I () I I

• IDl Divorce Court

J.ond L. lnlloilotlon. Roof·
ing, vinyl siding. storm doors
end windows. Free etti·
mateo. Call 814-992-2772.

82

1

ono iottor 10 -.aquora, to 1orm
four onlllllf'i -

'1:0&amp;
7:30

O.and M. Contractors. Vinyl
siding, replacement wll'l·
dowt. insulating. roofing,
new and remodeling, concreto. Ca11304·773·5131 .

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Coli 304 - 67&amp; ·
1331 .

· unocrarnblo- four Jurrl&gt;llo.

(jj)
MocNeil-l.ahrer
Newohour

"t----

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. local reference• • ·
furnished. Free estimat81.
Call collect 1-614·237·
0488 , day or night. Rogera
Betement Waterproofing.

1989 Pontiac Catolina.
97,000 miloa, 2nd owner,
run1 good, always lttrtt,
or boll offer. Coli
614-246· 9157.

~ THAT SCRAMBLfD WORD CIAIIE
by Hanrl Amokl lnd Sob Lll .

Ill SCTV NetWork

Home .
Improvements

RON'S Televlsipn Service.
Houali colla on RCA. Quazar.
GE. Spocilling in Zenith'
Call 304-578·2398 or 614: · '
446-2454 .

l'}j'}IJ'i\ft jj)l'}

ll:!J ~ ~~·

!BJ Eyewltnooo Nowo

SerVIC r.s

Plymouth Vaiilnt Scamp.
V-8, 2 door, 318 motor, AC,
PS, redill tires, redio. Call
814-24&amp;-9898.

•40o

Block. brick. mortar and
masonry tupplies. Mountain
State Block, At. 33. Now
Haven. W. Va . 304-882·
2222.

c

Transportation

' eaoo

Now brown laothor flight
jacket with fur collar. Fur
lined , size 48 (runa small).
Gift novor worn. 304-676 1869 .

.·

a

Cillll
II Ill (l2l
Newo
I]) It 00.000 Name Tha1

Tune

1981 Hondo 50 expre11
5150.1982 CT110 Hondo
(Troll 80) 1400. 19B2
CB900C Hondo 11 .400.
Call 814·367· 0482.
1978 750 Kawnokl mull
Hll. Sacrlfico $300. 304876·7479.
:

m

D

6 :00

Motorcycles

66
Pets for Sale
- ' - -- -- - - - -

67

Pickens Used Furniture half
mile out Jenicho Road .
Open 9:00 to 6:00 or by
appo ln,ment . Bedroom
suitt, 15 chest ot drawers
and dre11ara aaaortad sizes
and styles, wardrobes, full
and twin size bed a, m•ttreaa
and box aprlngs. twin and
full aize roll oway bods,
cedar ch11t1, desks wood
and metal, livingroom suits,
chairs, coffee tables, end
tableo. lompo. Iorge dinning
room auits, dinette sets,
OAK china closet. refrlgari·
tor, washer and dryer, Jewel·
ery, glti11ware, smell ap·
pliences. children clotheo.

Dragonwynd Canary Kennel. CFA Himalayan, Persian
and Siamese kitten1 . AKC
Chow puppioo. Coil 4483844 after 7PM .

''

19n Ford Choteau E-1&amp;0.
· window von . 304·882·
3361 after 6:00 PM.

6' proJector TV acrein, made
by Advent. Exc. cood. Perfect picture. Mull 1111
304-675-7479 .

Brierpuch Kennels All ·
breed grooming. Adu'ris &amp;
puppioo . Englloh Cocker
Spaniela. 388-9790 .

1.2 /18/85

1978 Ford 4 WD. atondard 4
opood,' good condition . Coil ,
614-992·3337 onytlme.
.

Coal for tale . lump, 1 stoker,
ogg. Picked up or dOIIvered .
614-446-9200 .

Kentucky Lump. Ohio Lump .
Ohio Stoker . Yard or deliv·
ory, cement blocka and
building motorial. Gollipolia
Block Co .. Pino St .. Gallipo·
lia, ·Ohio Cali 814 -448 2783 .

----------------- -'

1983 Ford Eacort. FWD. 4 ·'
ap .. E.C. f3400. 814-742· \
3083,

GE oide-by-oido double door
troll tfoo refrigerator. white.
$300. Exc. Cond . 304· 676·
7479.1

55

Television
Viewing

W.O.

.v...

Uaed J -20 D~ch Witch
Trencher and 480 John
Dooro Oozor. 1-814-6947842 or 694-5008.

new
console
for Chrlstmae.
channala:
worka
good . Got
304-675-8848 .

Vans &amp; · 4

'

lump houae COII,IImeatone,
grovel, oand delivered. one
ton and up. Jim Lanier,
304 -676 -7397 or 676 ·
1247.

RCA TV, 19 inch. $100. All

73

1978 Jaop CJ 7. B cyl .•
11onard, front winch. hun· _
toro apociol. t1 500.. 614· ; .;
742· 2700dlyoor814-367· . ~
0667

Firewood $15 pickup load .
Mobile home lot, 12'x60' or Aok for Howard. 614-367· P.itt Bull puppiea 5 wook a,
JACKSON ESTATES smaller, 875 water paid, 4th 7118 .
pure breed puppi11, 5 mo.
APARTMENTS (Equal a Nell, Gallipolis. Call 448·
Coli 814 - 388 - 9661
Houalng Opportunity) . 4416 after SPM .
Whlto 3 pc. bdr au~e. 8200 .. eveningt.
monthly rent llartl II t1 89
Baby crib with mattre••
for 1 bedroom and 1204 lor Mobile home space. 2 miles f76 .. Ploypon $25 ., 2 car AKC Reg . miniature Oach ·
2 bedroom. dopoalt t200. from Gallipolia on Rt. 688 . ...,, $15 each . Cali 814· ohund female, black a tan 3
loCited near Spring Valley Coli 814·441·3282 or 614· 448-2840.
moo. old . Coil 6t4 -682Ploza and Foodlond. pool 446-3413 .
673t .
and Cable TV available.
1,000 go I. water tank with
office houra as ponible 10
Mobile home lot in Rio pump a hooe s 400. Coil live Teddy Bears: AKC
am to 4 pm or\d7pmto9 pm Orondo, Ohio. Call 614· 61 4·643-0058 .
Reg ittered Chow Chow
Monday-Fridoy, Call 114· 446-9862.
puppiea. Ready for Christ ·
448 - 274&amp; o r leave
16 inch girl's bike with moo. Call614·256-1271 .
me11age.
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo tr~inlng whoel1, 3 mo. old,
Part, Routt 33, North of 135. Cali 61'4-446-1422 or AKC wh~o 14 moo. old
Nicely furnished mobile
Pomeroy. large Iota. Call 814-446-8080 otter 5pm.
female Toy Poodle . Woigho
home, eft. apt., central elr 614-992-7479 .
opprox . 4 lbo. Good whh
ond heat in city, adu~a only.
Magnu1 cord organ, good children, houae broke f160 .
Call 614·446·0338.
Trailer spacet . Smell child· 125 .. bod opread. twin, like Coli 814-446 -7415 .
ren accepted . Out Rt . 1. now $10, TV stand 15. Coli
Redecorated opt .. 2 bdr.,
Locust Road. back of KaK . 61 4-446-0990.
AKC Reg. Doberman pup11&amp;0 to 1250. Call 304·
1-304-876-1076.
pial , 6 wks. old, 2 blac k
876 · &amp;104 or 304- 876 ·
Block powder 56 .95 , muz· mala, 1 red male . Call
6388 or 304-675 -7898.
zleloading acceasories spe- &amp;14-44S-n9&amp;.
Merchandise
ciali11, Koebel 's Guns S.
Upstair• unfurnished apt.,
Repair, Millc reek Rd. Open AKC Reg . l.aoo Apso pupcarpatod. 111 utllitiaa poid, no
5·8 P.M. Mon. thur Fri. Sat . pies . Reedy in time tor
children. no poto. Coli 814·
1-5. Coll614-446-2316 .
Christm11 . One male, two
446-1837.
61 Houaehold Goods
female . Call 614 -446 MIMed hardwood slabs, 112 . 0706 .
Furniahod apt. 2 bdr .. 131 '12
per bundle, containing ap4th, Galli polio, 11 96 wotor
pro!' . 1 'h ton. fob. Ohio German wirehair pointer
paid . Call 448-4416 after Valley Furniture. now 1lo Pallet Co., Pomeroy , Ohio . pupt, AKC, exc. show &amp;
7PM .
uaed·. large eection of qual- Phone 614-992-8481 .
hunting bloodllnoo . Coli
hy lurniture. 121 8 Entern
614-388-8720.
7401'. Second AVe. 3 bdr .. Ave .. Gollipolio.
Wood. 140.00 a ton. Ac ·
t190 mq .. dop. required.
ceptlng heat vouchers. 814 - Jull In time for Chriotmasi
Call 814-448 -4222 be· E-Z Credit Mollohon Furni- 742-2466.
Reg . Pit Bull puppioa, 5wks.
tween 9 a 5.
ture, Rt. 7 North ot Geillpoold , champion bloodlines,
lia. Coll614-448-7444 ,
Standing timber, hardwood $300. Coli 814-266 ·1261 .
Deluxe 2 bdr. downtown.
a plna. Richard Bailay·614·
complete kitchen, all carpel. Kenmore wether-dryer 11t 992-3881 '
AKC reglllered Booglh.
wether, dryer, electric heat t250 , Speed Quoon t ....- - - - - - - - Fiold Champion aired . From
a AC. Oop. required. Call waahar -dryer aet 8250. Fros t tree white frige - 9 montho to 2 ·yaoro old.
doyall14·4411·4383, 1111. 1lo heevy duty Frigadalre daire,e&amp;O. alao man't 28 "
Slow to medium speed.
wookanda 814-448-0139 .
w01her f1 28. Kenmore 10 apaod bike. new, '65 . 614-949-2543.
waahor f126, G.E, waahor Call614-742-2980.
Furnished apt., 4 rooms &amp; avocado green f150. Kon - 1------....:.__
BosutHul white Collie pupa
bath, no polo. adulta. Avolio· more dryer avocado green 1 nine inch Rockwell tabkt to give away to good home.
bla Doc . 1. Call 114-448· 195. 1ido by aide refrigerator ·uw. 1 tool box for mini 614· 949-2906 .
1619.
copportono llko now t226. plck·up . Call 814-992 ·
rafrlgorotor whito t95 , ro· 6229 after 5:00.
AKC Lhooo Apoo pupa.
large 6 room upltaira apt., irlgorotor whlto troll fr11
mala• only . 20 champion• in
fumlohod kitchen,
mo. f 180. refrigerator copper- Storm w indowo and frames, pedigrea, gentle, quiet and
pluo utilitloa, 23B 111. Avt. tone troll fnot lt26, rofrig· 30x32 . Coi1814-992·2021 . loving dogo. 304-876-6637
Rat. a dop, no peto. Coli orator wh~o f8&amp;, wood a
or 875-2223. " to 110 uo Ia to
8 14· 448 ·4926.
coalbumingatovot17&amp; , 30 Now quilta lor 1111, t26 . lvoe us" .
in. goa range 176. Skoggo 11ch. Foother plllowo. t&amp;.
6 rooma • both. Locotod Applloncoo. Uppar River each . Stuffed toya(mon - Parakeetl, babhts, breedara,...
Crown City. Nawly • deco- Rd., . Galllpolia, 814-448· kayo. kangaroos and piga) cogoa. Coil otter 5:00 304·
rated, electric ttove • refrlg. 739B .
f6 . Nch. Call 614·742· ' 876-8030.
No poll. Coli 81 4 · 268·
2889 or 614-742-2475.
-----------1222.
Refrigerator and electric
AKC registered Garmon
llovo, oollrl hoovy plno triple Mochlno quilted comtonera. Shepherd pupo e100. ooch .
Furn. opt. for rent, utll~itl dra-r a cheat. Call 814· 160. Hond quUted quiha, 304-6711· 11143.
poid, U35 mo. Coli 8AM· 448· 7827 .
t100. Baby quilts, t1 5. Call
8PM. 114-446·9244.
814·992· 2488.
AKCBoatonTorrierpuppioo.
Country otyle oak furniture,
rudy by Chriotm11. Coli •
Furnlahad apt. 920 4th Avo .. hond crafted end flniohod. TONY' S GUN REPAIRS , 304·676-3862 attar 6:00
GoiUpollo. ono bdr., t250, antiquo roproductlono. Peui hot dip rebluoing. all typoa of
utllltleo paid, odu~a. Coli Conkol, At . 7, Tuppers gunamlth wort. f01t •rvlce.
Rot Terrier Puppiea. 304878-1508.
•
Plalno.
448-4411alter 7PM .
304-175-4831 .

1---------

Larry Wright

13.

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
lor the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hinls. Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTE
12-18

R 0 Y

H PG F

J QJ y

R O LR

ZJJF

p K

I' X X

L Ci

G J Q .IF E

•

f.lXJ ilK

L G J G

Ye1terday'e Cryptoquote: TRUE SC I ENCE
TEACHES, ABOVE ALL, T O DOURT AND TO RE

IGNORANT. - MIGUEL DE UNAM UNO
11 :Oii ffi MOVIE: 'Trt.e t~un·
11 :30 •
(I) l1l Tho Tonight
Show Tonight' a guests are
singer Michoel McDonald
and Torl Garr. (60 min .) in
Stereo.
Cil WKRP In Clncinnetl
• ([J T.J. Hooker Hooker
race• to clear the name of an
old roeing buddy oecused of
a string of supormorket rob·
berieo. (60 min.) (A) .
(I) Letenight AmtriCI

Ill TOld

.()I) ABC Nowo Nlghtlint
• One &amp;top a. t'Oftd
IHIIOI 8porb llutlrlted

Prwoonta 1M Soortamon of

ms "Tear Sports lllu11rated
announces their choice for
the outstanding sports person of 1986. 166 min.)
IMAXl MOVIE: ' Lovet·

cene•'

12:00 Cll Boot of Groucho
(!) SportoConter
Ill Entertainment Tonight
interview with James Taylor.
!BJ Trapper John. M .O.

G IHI Gimor
• Gunamoko
1 2:30 II ()) l1l ~~ Night With
Dovld unorman In Stereo.
I]) Bill Cooby Show
ill .Ski TV

.'

�Pege.- 14-The Daily Sentinel

_Housing starts
drop in November
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Con·
structlon ot new homes feU a sharp
12.2 percent In November, as the
rate at building sUpped to Its lowest
level In 2~ years, but analysts
blamed the decline on unusually
wet weather.
The Census Bureau reported
Tuesday that the decline In housing
construction brought the level of
houses started during last month to
a seasonally adjusted annual rate of
1.547 million - 3.3 percent behind
the level I'IDirded In November
1984.
The decline was the biggest
one-month sUp since May when
starts dropped 13 percent and the
lowest level of construction since
April1983. when 1.512 rnWion unl1s
were recorded, seasonally adjusted
at an annual rate.
Housing starts for the first 11
months of this year were running
2.1 percent behind conshuctlon for
the same period last year.
"I think for the most part It's a
fluke," Glenn Crellin, an analyst
with the National Association of
Realtors, said of the November
decline. "Much of the drop was
related to the very early onset of
winter In the Midwest and Nor·
tlif.ast. When you have six Inches ri
snow on the ground, it's nearly
. Impossible to start a house or
apartment building."

Housing Starts
Seasonally
adjusted
annual rates
in millions
of units.

"factored rut" by the adjustment.
Hrustng starts declined In three
of the four neglons d the nation, led
by a 31.3 percent decline In the
Northeast, the largest since a 42
percent drop In March 1984.
Construction felll2.7 percent In the
Midwest, 3.7 percent lrl the SoUth
but rose 4.3 percent In the West.
Michael Sumlchrast, an analyst
with the National AsSociation of
Home BuDders, also blamed rain
and soow for the overall decline but
ooted the report had a bright siderEquests for bulldlng permits were
running ahead of November a year
ago.
"Building permits are qul1e
strong," he said, and would support
new construction for about three
months.
Altll&gt;ugh permits fell 2.4 percent
from October to November, the
leVel Issued, 1.648 million, was 1.9
percent ahead of November 1984.
Most of the decline In construe·
tion during November was the
result of a 17.5 percent decline In
construction of slngle·famlly
ll&gt;mes. That deellne, which lrought
the seasonally adjusted annual rate
to 928,&lt;ro, was the biggest since a 25
percent drop In March 1984.

2.2

12.2
2.0 1---~~~
1.8 t - - -

Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Ohio
Beta Sigma Phi Sororlty wiU meet
Charlene
Hoelllch.
sororlty
tonight, 6::11
p.m., The
at the
homewill
ri
host lunch with Santa for members'
children and guests on Saturday
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church.

1.0

·

NDJFMAMJJASON
1984 1985.

L..--------------------.....11
of
BIG DECLINE - ·Conlitntc&amp;n new ho"""' decHned a shllrp 12.2
percent In November, the blggeltl drop In six monthOJ, the Censu!l
Bureau report Tue!oia3' afternoon. UPI.

told the News that Gottl is .t~
"meanest, most vicious mobster
J've ever encountered.'!
Gottl was Indicted March 28 on
charges Including murder, gambling and robbery and faces trial
next year In i!deral court.
Authorities said the decision to
kW Castellano may have been
l'll8lle possible by the recent death
from natural causes of the Gam·
blno mob's reputed No. 2 man,
Anlello Dellacroce, known as the
peacemaker In New York's largest

Ronald Goklstock, executive dl·
rector ot the state Organized Crime
Task Force, said he doubted the
slaylngs would be followed by
others,.but said if a war was to erupt
it would do oo quickly:
"Lots ot people had different
motives for kUling him. Really
what It Is Is a consensus armng the
mob ... 'that he was better off dead
than alive," said Goldstock. "My
sense Is that's an agreed-upon hit."

Free clothing day
The Gallla-Meigs Community
Action Agency will hold its free
clothing day for low-Income per·
sons on Friday from 9 a.m. to 12
noon. The agency's clothing bank Is
located at the old high school
building In Cheshire.

Chapman Shoes
NEXT

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THE PROFESSIONAL SERVICE FOR A
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The Cryslal Centerp1ece .
Bouauet - beaut1lut
flowers 1n a sculptured
glassware bowl from
France Later. it's perfect
for. fru il or candy.

TO ELBEIFELDS IN POMEIOY

at y
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.
-Comnnsston.
Copyrighted 1985

-

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Tues-·
day's winning Ohio Lottery :
numbers:
Dally Number: 7'!1.
PICK-4: 0935.

30°/o Off

•

Vol.35, No.172

n-.mbers: 797, 0935

ON SIPPERS FOR
THE ENTIRE FAMILY
•ANGLE TREADS
•DEAR FOAMS
•DANIEL GREEN

Meanwhile, Art Brill, spokesman
for the President's Commission on
Organized Crime, said law enforcement dllclals were playing "a
wati-and·see game" to see II the
slaylngs would be revenged.
"it they were sanctioned hits,
then you might not see any further
killings. But It It was a renegade act
there could be further killings," he
said.
·

KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES

Give flowers in a
Christmas gift.

Lottery winning

family.

r::=====================~

Mason Chapter 157 of the Order of
Eastern Star will meet tonight at
7:00p.m.

two-car collision on Ohio 7.
A car drive,~ by Dor!$ell J. :
Randolph, 18, of ,J&gt;l65 Bashan Rd., :
was northbound on 7,hjust south of ·
Ohio an, when he slowed tor a right :
tum. A car drtven by William D. :
Fltz, 34, ri BeVerly, fl!POrtedly :
attempted to p8ss Randolph on the ·
right and struck his vehicle In lhe :
right side.
.
:
Fltz suffered minor Injuries In the •
5: :II p.m. accident, but was not :
treated, troopers said. Fltz' car :
sustained moderate damage and :
Randolph's light damage. Fltz was ·
charged with passing on the right. :

CHRIS·TMAS
SALE

1.2

Monday on a crowded midtown
Manhattan street by three gunmen
armed with automatic weapons.
The gurunen escaped.
An FBI spokesman said Tuesday
its agents and pollee were·search·
lng for John Gottl - a reputed
Gambino familY "capo", or captain, who was reported to be In
hiding - In order to question him
about the kllllngs.
Gottl, 45, Is the leader of a "more
violent-prone, ctiwboy" Gambino
faction, dissatisfied with Castella·
no's emphasis on white-collar
crime '!lid anxious to expand the
gang's lnvol&lt;nnent In narcotics,
loan sharklng and hljacklngs, G.
Robert Blakey, a Notre Dame
profesoor . and organized · crime
expert, told The New Yoik Times. ·
In a conversation recorded by the
FBI, Gottl said Castellano had
punished him for being "too tough,"
the New York Dally News reported.
A pollee expert on organized crime

Meets tonight

Two West VIrginia women were
admitted to Veterans Memortal
Hospital following a single-car
accident Tuesday night on Ohio 124.
Hospital officials said Shannondoah Hinkle, 19, of Ravenswood,
W.Va., was listed In satisfactory
condition with muhlple bruises,
while a passenger In his car, Amy
L. Smith, 16, of Millwood, W.Va.,
was transferred to the Charleston
Area Medical Center Memorial
Division. Smith was listed In fair
condition with multiple bruises and
a fractured shoulder at the time ri
her transfer.
The GaiUa·Melgs post c1 the State
Highway Patrol said Hinkle was
westbound on 124, about 5~ miles
east of Racine, when he apparently
lost control of his car, went.off the
lett side of the road and struck a
tree.
Hinkle's car sustained heavy
damage In the 8:16p.m. accident
and he was charged by the patrol
with DWI and no driver's license.
A Washington County man was
cited by troopers following a

1.4

Mob boss wanted in Castellano assassination
NEW YOIU&lt; (UP!) - Pollee and
FBI agents today searched for the
leader of a "cowboy" faction ol the
Gambino crime farnUy wiD Is
wanted for questioning In tbe
slaying of the mob's reputed boss,
Paul Castellano, and his chief aide.
Authorities said they were tryfng
to determine It the slaylngs had
been approved by other mob bosses
or were "renegade" acts likely to
lead to gang warlare. But state
officials said they belleved the fact
Castellano faced a serles of trlals
made It more likely the kUllngs had
·recelved approval.
Castellano, 70, was the reputed
leader of the nation's largest mob
and "boss d bosses" In u.s.
organized crime. He and his helr
appa~t In the Gambino familY.
Thomas Bllott~ 47, were killed

Two ·burt in accident

1.6

Construction of multl-!amily
muses dropped 2. 7 percent during
November, the bureau said.
ln October, housing starts rose a
revised 9,0 percent, 11&gt;.1.761 mWion
units. September's new construe·
tlon registered a 7.1 percent decline.
'

Although the housing figures are
adjusted to take into account
seasonal fluctuations, Crelllil satd
any unusual actlvjty would not be

Wednesday, December 18, 1985:

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 19. 1985

stgns new

Call 01 v1s1t lor local
delivery. or we can wire
it anywhere

31ele0ota®
OPEN ·NIGHTS 'TIL 8:00

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP , -·

J 106 lutttmut An.
· PoiWtroy, OH.
I ,,... _ . PHONE 9'2-2039 or 992·5721 .· ,-,Jio.,
!rditra~===·=====·==•••=tir·
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:•

'arisns rtm' s •=•••snsnm•"

I
'

I

'

I

FlEE PAlliNG

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

ODES lease

In ceremonies held Wednesday at
the Ohio State Highway Patrol'.s
Gallipolis post, Tpr. Kelly A.
Worstall received a cermlcate of
recognition for his IHesavlng ac;·
By NANCY YOACIIAM
ment Block Grant allocation, which
!Ions at the scene of an accident on
~ .tall writer
was received In 1985, as rEquired l7y
SR 325 In Gallla County on July :D,
Meigs County Commlssloners the state.
1985.
Wednesday voted to ·enter Into
A general fund a'rtltlcatlon of
Capt. Charles J . Nlshwltz, corn·
another lease with the Ohio Bureau $7110.00 needed to pay year end
mander
of the Jackson dlstrlct,
of Employment Services for the utUlty bills was reported by the
presented
the certlOcate to Tpr.
office buDding on Union Ave. The board.
Worstall on behalf· of Col. Jack
18 month lease Is effective Jan. 1.
The board also reported a letter
Walsh, Highway Patrol
The yearly rental rate for the from the Sallsbury Township Trus·.
superintendent.
building Is $6596.04.
tees requesUng the road to the old
Tpr. Worstall was honored for hiS
In other matters, local residents county lan«lt!U he added to township
handling ot an accident In which he
have until Jan. 4 to enter objections mileage. The board wUI ask Phil
discovered a severely Injured
to applications received Wednes- Roberts, county engineer, to review
victim who was trapped In her car
day by commissioners lor liquor the request and make a
off the road. The victim had
license transfers.
recommendation. ·
sustained serious lnjurtes causing
Rajuestlng a C-111cense transfer
ln matters pertaining to county
her difficulty in breathfng. He
from WIUiam Buchanan, St. Rt. 7, roads, wmmlssloner Manning
called for an emergency squad and
Chester, Is L'I'D Co., a partnership Roush asked Roberts and Ted
rescue equipment and then used a
between Larry Deem and Terry Warner, county highway depart·
crowbar to PlY open the jammed
Deem, Tuppers Plains, doing busl· ment supervisor, to place reflectors
car door. He moved the girl's head
ness as LTD Carry-Out, St. Rt. 7, on the curve on County Rd. 3 by
to clear her airway and applied a
Chester.
Fort Meigs. Roush said ·he had.
compress to stop a head laceration
TROOPER HONORED- U . Dan Relldenon, left, W~wu~~r~~~~~~MM
Rajuestlng a transfer tor a D-1, reports troni Rutland EMS rt tour
from bleeding.
loob on •Capt. CbarlesJ. Nillbwllz, rlpt, preaents a the olaD acddmt on SR 3211 In Galla County on
D-2 and D-3 license . from PMA accidents at that locatkm In a year's
'l)lr. Worstall did not want to
cert111ca1e rt recognition II) Tpr. Kelly A. Woratall. July 20, 1985.
Enterprises, Inc., Rt. 3, first floor time.
move the victim lor fear ol
and basement, Salisbury TownCommissioner Rich Jones asked
aggravating possible back and
ship, Pomeroy, Is Timothy Charles Roberts and-Warner I they would
lntemallnjurles. She stopped brea·
Adams at the same address.
be placing cinder piles at various
tblng_tor brlefperlodsseveral times
AppUcatlons must be forwarded points on hiUs d some county roads
but began respiration on her own
to the OhiO Department of Liquor for u~e by residents. Johes mentl·
each time. The riflcer stayed with
Control by.,IJ'Ii_9.Jjll\~ary.,
, mec~ ~ Rd. fn part~r.
het. •.BIId gave po!!ltlve relnilrce·
CommlssiQn moved to extend an Warner Said he would be putting
rnent untO an ' elnergency unit
additional 2:i .tt. In a westerlY cinders In several locations, lnclud·
transported her to the hospital.
direction and at the same depth to · lng Success Rd.
COLUMBUS, Ohio . (UP!) - A then to ChUdren's, where doctors
"Medical personnel at the hospi·
Despite statements by rescue
the existing property lease held by
The board tabled an animal 9-year-old boy who fell Into an ley said he was n cardiac arrest and workers that they were able to feel
tal said Tpr. Worstall's actions
the Chester Township Trustees for claltn from Calvin Hawk, Tuppers pond and remained under water for
a pulse, Kilman said he was · were Instrumental In preventing
·the ·Chester Volunteer Fire Plains, untO It can discuss the claim more than 40 minutes died today at had a body temperature d about 00
further Injury and possible brain
convlna'd Jeremy's heart did nol
degrees.
Department. with BW McKtnne:Y, dog waroen. Children's Hospital.
Arter being placed on a heart· beat between the time he feU into damage due to lack of oxygen,"
Bob Woods. Dorsal Mlller and Hawk has asked for SJi !or a
Capt. Nlswitz said.
A hospital spokeswoman said lu~ 17ypass machine, his hear! the water about 8:00 a.m. and the
Harold Newell, represmtlng the four-year-old ewe and $49 for a Jeremy Ghllonl of suburban Han·
"Although the victim lapsed Into
began beating again and he was time he was placed on tbe
tire department, were present to nine-month-old ewe.
over died "sometime this morning" placed oo a respirator to aid hearl-lung machfne, about 12:20 a coma for seven days with severe
make the request for the additional
head fnjuries, she eventually re. ·
The tnliowlng Interdepartmental and that doctors were stU! working breathing.
p.m.
footage needed for construction c1 a transfers or funds were approved;
to determine the exact time and
Dr. Ed Kosnlk, a pedlatrtc gained consclousness, went
Dr. James Kilman. chief ot
storage buDding.
$194.00 for juvenile court; $156.33 cause of his death.
through an extensive recovery and
thoracic surgery at the hospital, neurosurgeon, said, "There are a
The revised lease will carry the tor the county lnflnnary; $150 tor
is presently back In school at the
Jererey fell Into the pond Tues- said Wednesday Jeremy had been lot ri organs that are In critical
same dates as the original 99 .year the TB office; $132.16 tor county day morning, after he. decided to
Buckeye Hills Career Center In Rio
put Into barbiturate coma to shape. The liver was damaged
lease which was drafted In June court; $334.15 fortheDeparlmentd. take a shortcut back home to pick
Grande.
We feel Tpr. Worstall's
.forestall further brain damage, because of the lack of oxygen."
1961.
Human Service; $21,346.34 tor the up an Item for school. Rescuers In while efforts began to Improve the
He also said there was some actions played a decisive role In the
The board accepted a bid ol $280 highway department.
victim's survival."
the rural eastern Ucklng County condltkln of his organs.
Internal bleeding.
from John F. Stiffler Jr. and
The board wW meet n·ext week on community pulled him from the Icy
'l)lr. Worstail joined the Highway
Jeremy's roother and stepfather,
Kilman said Jeremy's urinary
Associates, Jackson, to audit .the Friday at I p.m.
Patrol In 1981 and has been
water some 40 minutes after he fell output was poor, Indicating a poorly Monica and Thomas Kashner,
county's 1984 Community DevelopIn· and attempted to resuscitate functioning heart. He also said stayed at the hospital througbout
assigned to Gallipolis since that'
him.
limP. He Is orlglnally from Zanesdoctors were more concerned wit~ the boy's fight lor life and were not
He was tltst taken to Licking damage to other organs besides the available for comment.
vUie where he graduated from John
MeriiOrial Hospital In Newark and brain.
Glenn High School In New Concord.
He attended Ohio University. He
and his wile. Kelly, Jive in Bidwell.

Fight for life·ends for child
found in icy pond waters

Funds approved
for repair project

Finn wants out of airport operation
. GALLIPOLIS - Amburgey Avi·
atlon ot Point Pleasant has pulled
out of the Gallla-Melgs Regional
Airport and a Gallla County
resident may have made tbe county
commission an offer to run the
airport It cannot refuse.
Amburgey notified the county
commission In a letter dated Nov. 5
that It fntended to exercise an ~tion
In Its contract with the Gallla·Melgs
Regional Airport Authority and pull
out of the laclilty, effective Dec. 5.
Fonner Gallla County Sheriff
and current Gallipolis fireman
James Saunders told the county
commission earller this week he
would be wUihig to operate the
airport under a contract with the
authority and commission that

would pay him $3.50 per ,hour, or
$791 per month, based on~ hours.
Under the contraci, Saunders
would operate as the airport's
manager and keep the facility open
at least eight bours a day, seven
days a week. Because Saunders'
services would be listed as contract
services, the county would not be
r:equlred to pay fringe benefits It
would a .tuD·tlme employee.
County olllclals said Amburgey,
which also operates the Mason
Coonty Airport, in Point Pleasant,
wanted out of the contract becuase
the Gallla-Melgs facility .Is not a
"money-making" venture. Amburgey had operated the airport since
Aprll under a contract with the
authority and a permit Issued by

the county commission.
"I know the airport wUI not make
money," Saunders told the commls·
slon, "built does attract business.
We need the airport. We wUI be the
closest airport wh(-n the construction on the dam (GaUipolls Locks
and Dam) begins."
Saunders. himSelf a pilot, would
sell fuel and collect hangar rent and
turn the money over to the airport
authorlty. Commission President
Verlln Swain said the county )IIOU!d
carry liability Insurance and pay
the facilities' utUIIy bills.
"It would sure simplify things lor
us," Swain said. " We~re not In
business to lose money, but we
wouldn't upset the apple cart If we
didn 't make a lot of money."

Compromise .reached on new spending legislation
The Teleflora Hurricane
L~mp Bouquet - a hall·
day favorite in line. French
sculptured glassware lhat
wilt remain a shining
tmd1tion for many
· Christmases to M•~o'

2 Secdons, 16 Pages

Trooper
Worstall
honored

•

· State Representative Jolynn Bos- 25 percent of the cost of the project.
ter announced today that the Ohio Federal funds provide].5 percent ri
Department of Development !)as the cost, dependent upon the vutage
deelded to award an additional meeting Its local Obligation.
"When the department of trans$21,&lt;ro to the VIllage of Pomeroy to
portation
estimates for repalr111g
enable the village to repair sUppage
on Union Avenue.
the sUp exceeded earlier projec·
The State Controutng Board must tlons, the village found that the
approve the grant at Its Jan. 6 $71,&lt;ro we had procured last year
meetlng before the money can be was Insufficient," Boster stated.
At that point Boster asked the
released.'
The $21,&lt;ro award will supple· State Development DPpartment for
ment a $77,00J Imminent threat additional ald.
"We explained that Union
grant awarded by the Department
of Development last year, Boster Avenue Is a critical link to services
·during an emergency. The Depart- .
said.
The imminent threat fund adJnln· ment of Development deserves
lstered by the state will help the thanks tor Its responsiveness to the
village meet Its obligation to to pay situation," Boster concluded.

The Teleflora Music Box
Bouquet - a beautiful ·
silver-plated pear .lree ·
Ihat. plays "The Twelve
Days of l;:hristmas,'' and
Will rematn a lamily Iradilton
lor many Chr·iis lmatse~
to come

•

WASHINGTON (UP]) -House · White House would not have tO
and Senate pegotlators, '&gt;llhose furlough tens of thouSands of
orlgtnal version of a $370 bi!Uon · mn-esseiltlal federal worl&lt;ers whlle
catchall spending bUI was rudelY a new long-term spending measure
rebuffed by the House, have · was drafted. ·
.
fashioned a new measure to keep
The money bill for the depart·
the government running through rnents of Detense,lnterior,-AgriCul·
next September.
ture, Treasury and Transportation
:rt~e House .was expected to taKe arid fQr other government ofllees,
up the bill shdrt!Y ¢ter 11 a.m. EST Including· the White llouse, Is the
today, and t,he Senate w_ould: act a ,last major Item on Congress' 1~ ·
short lline later .If th!&gt; lne~re agenda. · ·
~lieS. Flnaf passage would.clear
A day long deadi!)Ck pn defense
·.the way toi' COngress to adjot!m for . spending was finally broken Wed·
· ·
nesday evening, allowing tired ·
. the year.
.
The conference committee ap- cooferees to complete their work
proved an omlnbusspendlngblllfor amid threats from both sides that
fiscal 1~ on Monday, shortly any more last-minute hitches would
before several government agen- jeopardize the entire package.
clesranoutofmoney,buttheHouse
Senate bargainers reluctantly
unexpectedly defeated lt.
agreed to a $1.3 billion reduction .
Congress was then forced to pass sought by the House for defense
a three-da:jfundlngextenslonsothe spending and succeeded ln~etlln.ll
I

House negotiators to even more
grudgingly approve$~ rnUllon for
chemical weapons production facti·
Illes In 199i.
The House, which opposed money for chemical weapons, Insisted
their manufacture be delayed 'until
'at least llscal )'ear 1987. That delay
collld give opponents - Including
the chalnnen of the House and
Senate ~pproJH'Iatlons Committees
-ariother year to block production.
·
· · ·
Negotiators from .both cnarnllers
were eontldent ·the measure would
pass.
"! think It w1U be accepted,"
House Appropriations Committee
Chalnnan Jamie Whitten, D·Miss,
said.
Sen. Ted Stevens, R·Aiaska,
predicted Senate passage and said
President Reagan "will sign this

bill." Asked how he felt about it,
Stevens said: "I'm satisfied with it.
I'm not overjoyed."
In the end, the Senate agreed to
reduce 1986 Pentagon spending
levels in the bill from ~.7 billion
to $297.4 billion, and to take the cut
rut c1 the agency's 1986 budget
authorlty.
The Reagan administration
made an unsuccessful last-ditch
effort to take the cut from the $6.3
bllUon the Pentagon has lett wer In
1.985 funds, oot Hoose members
balked.
The Senate also agreed to House
demands that the Pentagon's lef·
tover $6.3 billion be specifically
earmarked for pay raises, retirement and training programs. The
House sought that . provision to
prevent the money from being used
as a cushion agplnsl an estimated

$5 billion In 1~ defense cuts that
may he required by the newly
enacted balanced budget law.
The House convinced the Senate
to go along with some Pentagon
procurement retonn, gtvlng the
government more power to regu·
late which defense contractors'
· costs can be reimbursed by
taxpayers.
On another Issue that contributed
to the defeat d the first spending bill
M9Jiday, House negotiators let
stand a controversial provision
allowing senators to Pam an
additional $7,500 a year In outside
speaking tees. Limits on House
hooorarla would remain at :n
percent of members' salaries, but
regularly scheduled pay raises
would be harder tb veto with the
change.

Charges
pending
inB&amp;E
Four suspects have been qu&lt;'SU·
oned by Meigs County Sheriff
Howard Frank In connection with a
breaking and entering a-t the
Pomeroy Gun Oub on Wednesday.
Deputy Brian Bissell surprised
the foursome almost Immediately .
alter tlif.y . entered )he buDding
about 1 a.m. Olficcr Blsr.ell blocked
their return to the vehicle, but the
four got away on foot. The car.was
later towed from lh!.' scene.
The subjects were appl'!'hended
later In the mornln~ and brought lrt
for ques lion In g..
· Charges in the incident will be
flied Friday morning.
HarrtsonvUie, Bradbury and Sa-·
tern Center 'Elementary Scllools
were also broken into durtng the
early morning hours of Wednesday.
At 3a.m .. while on routine patrol,
Sher~f Frank· observed a rear
window broken ou~ of the Harrisonville school to allow ent ry. The
school was contacted bui nothing
was found fo.be missing.
Agent Herman. 'Henry ot the
Bureau of CrimIna! Invest igatlon.
was called to do flngerpnntlng at •
the Bradbury School where a video :
cassette recorder and some money ·
were reportedly taken.
;.
The sheriff s department was :
notified about noon Wedni'Sday that ;
the Salem Center School had a·lso ·
been entered during the night and a·'
video cassette recorder, a cassette '
{Continued on page 12)
·

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