<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13340" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/13340?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-21T19:12:52+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44312">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/6893e13f5506f0f9f57bb33c13aa917b.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e93e5b62158ee6bcc3b5aa05cc32fda4</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="41795">
                  <text>..••

Plge-E-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

December 22. 1986:

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea11111t, W. Va.

*....
........
.• .• •, ..* *

Christmas observances were 'low key' during ·1840s, 50s

'

BY JAMI!li!Willll
Speclll Correepoi.da

~.and Jackson crackers" .The
mastlff who came out to bark at The thermometers froze up. '!bey;.
Joumal thenwEIIt on to tell bow tar
passersby , lost his footing and shot went down 10, 15, yes 20 degTee6;
GALLIPOLIS - The 1WJUse we too !!IallY used the Christmas
oom~ the road as If. fired from a
below nothing." (From the jooma~.
feature today
holiday as an ~cuse for getting
of
a man called '!be Old Stager,.
canoon."
dates to about
drunk and participating In all kinds
After the Ice storm, came lots of appearing In the Galllpolls 'l'rlbune'.
l&amp;l2 when WOct "rabiJie.roua!ng."
snow - ''My, what sleighing! And ot Jan. 25,1893).
L ........
llam Clendenin
About that same year the paper not for a few days only, but for
Jamee Sailde lllldnlllll: 18 ""'"''
had It bullt. The
DOted' that during the week before weeks and months. And j)ow cold!
Bu....
-e eroouvDie. OhiO 4Jl31., . ·
.......,.
reason for Its
Ouistmas the sawbucks and the
mention tnls
Swellheads had a ballgame on the
week Is ~t we
Public Square. It would be Interest·
Wanted to note that Christmas log to know whilt kind of ball this
obsavances during the ]BI)'s and was as this was· some 2 decades
1850's were very low key compared before the Invention ct foOtball.
to the present.
Quite oftEII the weather was a
FOR INSTANCE, In the year factor In the celebra(loJI of Christ·
lll43, the only mention we could tlnd mas. In :18&amp;7 an unusually blgh
In theGalllpoUsJoumal newspiper rumunt of rain fell on the town and
' of Christmas was that on Christmas Gallipolis was near the flood stage. •
day the C'..alllpoUs Sewing Circle In 1849 snow fell on Dec. 10 (the
FIRST PlACE winDer In the bu!ilneM caiepry of the 1985 Gallipolis
'
would
bold a dinner "at the bouse of season's first Sllow) and by the nex)
· llnislmas Decorations was the Interior Sbop on state 81. .
Mr. H. Cushing". Presumably tills day the snow was several Inches
Cushing house was the present day deep. In 1851 the Ohio River troze
''Our House". The article of llN3 over by Christmas for the first tlme
also stated that a fair to sell useful In anyone's memory.
articles would !le held In conjuoc·
Perhaps the most notable Christ·
, This Christmas Eve and Christmas
tlon with the dinner and all mas for Its weather (In the 18415's
Day a musical Christmas Card featuring
proceeds would go to the Presbyter· and 18!0's) was tre year of 1855.
' Jan Church steeple fllnd. The tickets Rain turned to sleet wblch covered
your favorite seasonal and traditional
for the dinner were $1 whlcb Is a the ground with a sheet d. lee llke m
Christmas songS beginning Tuesday afgood Indication of how sumptuous other year accordlng to Cllle man• s
ternoon and running thru Midnight Wed·
the table was as a dollarwasqultea journal who lived In Ga1lla COOnty
nesday, Christmas Night with limited
bit of money In those days when from lB:V 1D 1893.
polil sold for 8* a pound.
' '"!be · boys skated around the
breaks . .
In l8t4 the ladles hekl a second 1Dwn on the sidewalks or In the
dinner and fair and at Its conclusion streets. while tbelr elders got many
T.L. Perry laUIIChed an unmanned a slip and fall. Why, a scboobnarm
We invite you and your
bot air balloon. The Gallipolis In this county had to pun herself up
family to enjoy the wonderSewing Society raised $61.50 for the a hill to the bouse where sbe
steeple fund.
ful Sounds of Christmas on
boarded, by a fence. One evening as
In 1849 the big Christmas events she neared the lop c1 the ascent, her
990 WJEH · and Stereo 101,
were planned by the various bold brol&lt;e, and away shewentwlth
WYPC, In Galllpolls. And as
Temperance unions that had been her sldrts tor runners, DOt stopping
an
added bonus WYPC will
· created In the 1840's. On Christmas till down the hill through a pair c1
remain on the air all night
day at 2 p.m. one unit met at the gate bars and across the road!"
SECOND PlACE winner In the booshe s auepry cl the 111815
Presbyterian Church and heard Dr.
Christmas
Eve.
"Even the oogs were knocked out
G•Wpolls Chrll!lmas Decorations was the Peddler's Pllnlry.
G.H. Hale lecture on temperanre. by that Ice. Out at MUis an old
' '
Later that day, members and
guests were enlertalned at their
new lodge building where oysters
were the main Interest amoog the
foods. The Sons of Temperance met
at the Star House for their
Christmas day dinner.
IN IJIIIO, the ftrst Christmas ad
that we know of appeared In the
Journal: "Christmas Toys, Oysters, Sardines, etc., Henry Venier" .
''Henry Venier \rollkl respectfully Inform his old friends and new
'
u=.t
oo
that he has just received his large
stock d. Christmas toys direct from
the manufacturers and have them
~~ ~fh '1i' r.=."...," ,..,...,..-=, ....-;::,,.._....,
now open for fnspectlon at the old
l.J.~
stand on Cwrt Street."
The editor d. the Journal remarkl!d that be had never seen
...,.ny.ll'••feellatl
"such a display of toys and fancy
wares."
J{
, . ., ftllallle air ud w In'1854 the Journal remarkl!d that
',
THIRD PlACE winner In the buslne!s caiepry of the I88S Ga!Upo!lo
from saturday to Thursday me was
tbfoiiNrt, ......... f .............
_OiriJtmas
___
Deeo
__
ratlons
__
was_Man_e_Des_ign_ers_,b_y_Lanoa
__·_sBe_~~~~&amp;y_s_alon_.__co_ns_tan_tty_h_e_artng:
__
· ·_·c_anno_n_,gu_ns_.-1
J"".
'
of (IBOtlwtJJ . .d hio.Bd .,..,

t·

.

.

-·

WJEH &amp;WYPC

Proudly Presents For Your
Listening Pleasure...

'II

.

rsrs~fu ~ ~ wfi11Du

,, ,,,
'11'.
,

f

1

1./~1::5'\U

coff fkrdll~o

1J lk?J

1

,.

!

I
I ''''
1. ·· ·.,

fA......_ ...

i;.,._\

L"lt~

~1
OPEN...

WE

• we ll'ftoall your value4 but.._
.... ..._...,..,,. ..,,... . .r

•
•

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

apjtrt'f'latloa,aloq wtc• .......,

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

ll'llly Joy_w_n Ia

,JJ{./
I ~X

I

I
I
i
I

"'""'ry -Y·

...

I
II

Certified Wellness Technicians
Individualized Programs Upon
Request

• Saunas Provided in Men and Women
Locker Rooms
• Linen Provided
• Body Composition Analyzer for
Dieters will be Available at a Small
Nominal Fee.

.I \
I
I
i
I
I

• Single, Couple, Family, Corporate
Rates

II
I

I
I

-PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

•

•

at y .......,.enttne
Vol.36, No. t 74

1 SO&lt;:tion, 1 0 Page• 26 Canto
A M~ltlmedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday. December 23, 1985

.copyrighted 19116

President signs new farn1 credit bill
Farm Belt for the Republican Party" If Reagan had
vetoed the five-year farm bill.
Reagan chose to align himself symhollca!ly with
the farm bill )le had threatened to veto by agreeing to
accompany Agriculture Secretary John Block to a
teleconference via satellite to answer questions from
hundreds of agricultural journalists.
After congressional committees approved a farm
credit bill accepl,able to the administration, there was
little doubt Reagan would sign the measure to
restructure the federally chartered, farmer-owned
Farm Credit System, which holds one- third of the
farm debt.
Reagan and administration officials bad threa·

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan whose veto threat forced farm bill compromises by
Congress - today signed a five-year farm bill and a
farm credit measure with a media blitz aimed at the
economically stressed Farm Belt.
The scheduled signing ceremony and teleconter·
ence were a Woamatlc contrast to Reagan's veto In
March of the year's first farm legislation- a largely
partisan farm debt relief measure rushed through
Congress by Democrats with the help of heartland
Republicans.
This time around, Rep. Edward Madigan, Rill.,
ranking Republican on the House Agriculture
Committee had predicted "political disaster In the

tened a veto of the five year farm bill during nearly a
year of tough negotiations with Congress. Reagan
faUed to get the dairy policy he wanted. But reducing
grain and cotton price supports to make U.S. farm
products more competitive overseas made the
difference for the administration.
Block said Congress made'a "good faith" effort to
trim the commodity program costs for the first three
years of the bill to $52 bfillon, within $2 billion of
Reagan's target. The target was revised upward
throughout the year to comi&gt;ensate for worsening
economic conditions In agriculture.
Heavy costs represent taxpayer subsidies to ctfset
the lower prlce supports. Income supports, which

LANCASTER - Congressman
Clarence Miller, R·Lancaster, has
labeled the recent enactment of a
new federal balanced-budget bill an
"historic step."
He warns, however, that the act
"wlll require some hard choices ID
be made In the years ahead.
The Balanced Budget and Emer·
gency Deficit Control Act of 1985popularly known as the Gramm·
Rudman-Hollings Act - req)llres
Congress to make annual 'budget
deficit reductions of about $36
billion per year untll the federal
budget Is balanced.
was signed Into law on Dec.l2.
Under the law, future federal
budget deficits are not to exceed the
following: $171.9 blillon In 1!186; $144
billion In 1987; $1&lt;ll billion In 19S8;
S72 bllllon In 1989; $36 billion In 1990;
an&lt;!, zero In 1991.
. The act requires the president to
submit a budget to congress that
meets these deficit ceUings and
prohibits congress from taking up
any oodget resolution which con·
ta1ns a deficit In excess of these
ceUings.
If congress falls to enact a llldget
that makes these deficit cuts, the

- xt

new law puts In place a mechanism
which wUI ensure that the levels are
met.
Calculations of projected deficits
made by the Congressional Budget
Office and the Office of Management and Budget would be reviewed by the General Accounting
Office, wblch would officially notify
the president.
The report would calculate the
perrentage reduction In the spend·
lng of all non-exempt programs
that would be required to meet the
deficit goal. The prPsldent would
then Issue an order which would
reduce the budget authority for all
non-exempt programs by the per·
centage requited to eliminate the
excess deficit.
If such an order Is required, one
half cl the reductions are to come
from the defense budget: and, the
other half w111 come frOm non·
defense programs.
"With passage of the Gramm·
Rudman-Holllngs Act, congress
and the president have finally set In
motion a process of real deficit
reductlo11," says Miller. Although
the act wlll require some hard
choices to be made In the years
ahead, II Is an action which Is bng

overdue."

OUI'STANDING SERVICE - These four members of the Racine
Volunteer Fire Department were honored wllh plaques Friday evenklg
at the annual ·!Ire department and eme"ll"DCY squad Cbrlstmas dlllller
at the Racine Fire Slalion. Recelvillg awaa'll&lt;dor outstanding service
and dedication f~r the year 1985 were,l·r, Scoll WoHe, Doug Rees, Flre

Chief Hank Johnson, and Geo"ll" Cummins. Service awards were also
presented to emergency squad memhers.Flre department presenla·
lions were made by Hank Johnson and Lee Floyd, whlle George
Cummins, squad chief, and squad president Donna Wolfe made EMS
presentations.

.

State ag~ncies adopt guidelines for students with AIDS
Department of Health said In a cover letter. The
guidelines were being Issued, he said, because "you
may stlll be put In the position of responding to
concerns from staff or parents of ch ildren In your
schools."
The greatest potenllal for AIDS transmission, the
guidelines say, Is through contact between younger
children and neurogtcally handicapped chlldren with
the diSease who lack control of their bodily secretions
or exhibit violent behavior.
·
Decisions to exclude handicapped chlldren with
AIDS from a public school sel tlng slDuld be made
"only after careful evalua tion of each child's
Individual risk of transmitting the disease," the
guidelines say.

Because a small number of children with AIDS Is
anticipated In Ohio within lhe nexl several years,
each case can be Individually assessed. When a child
with AIDS Is admitted 10 school, personnel who are
aware of the child's condition "should be the
minimum necessary to assure proper care of the
child. The number of Informed staff should be
sufficient to observe lhe child for behavioral or
medical problems that could heightl'n the potential
for AIDS transmission.
To ensure proper cleaning and disinfection for
handling Instances ri spilled blood and body fluids, thl'
department recommended that soiled sunaces
should be thoroughly washed with soap and water,
then dlslnfected with a 10 pen:Pnt solution of

I

household bleach and water. The solution should ix'
freshly prepared fo r each uS&lt;'.
Personnel cleaning the spUI should wear gloves and
wash hands thoroughly when fini shed . Disposable
towels should be used whenever possible and mops
should be thoroughly rinsed In the dlslnfectanl
solut ion.
For an Injury resulting in bleeding, lhl' person
assisting lhe child should wear gloves whenever
possible. Direct contac l with blood Is polenllally
Infectious, especially when lilere are breaks in the
skin. Proper handwashlng (soap and running waler
for 15 seconds) slgnl!lcantly reduces lhe risk of
Infection.

Seven die in accidents
Seven people, Including a pedes·
trian, died In accidents on Ohio
roadways during the weekend, the
State Highway Patrol reported
today.
A patrol count showed one death
Sunday, tour Saturday and two
Friday night. The victims died In
six accidents. None of them was
believed to have been wearing a
seal bell, a patrol spokesman said.
'!be patrol tallies latalltles result·
lng from accidents on the state's
public roadways each weekend
between 6 p.m. Friday and mid·
night Sunday.
Kllled were:

OFFICERS. DIRECTORS, AND EMPLOYEES

OHIO VALLEY BANK
Vldtio Allie
Tom Arrington
Jt~tBartow

Pam 181H

Judy-loy

lollylonnO!t
Mld!ootl-oo
Molly lfoorNr
Modtollut Ann lottie
ConnJe IOWrNn

Koltl! R. ..andobO&lt;rf
Debra Buell

Connie lurcheh

Dolole 8urgo11
Chtttene lumtns

E-o con..

Janice A. Clrter
INncla Cremetns

lharonC~a

OlonaCru""'
Jim Dotlloy
MlmMIOavll
Pottyllovlo

Mortln DLYM Dunn
Iandy Ellwlfllo
Emlf'IOI'I E. EVIIII
Mtrrll L. Evtnt
T.,...Evans

Bill Fodoiey
Dott~ Fellure
Sheron flthtr
Aldt K. Fowler
Jo Ellen Fr..,c.
Judy Hog..rty
Judy HtN

Steven Newberry
Jennlf~ Otbome
Linda ptymlll
Aoyn!Of1&lt;j Polcyn

MIIIIA Prtn
holly Rolnoy

Sunday

West Union: Steven A. Unger, Z7,
West Union, In a one-car accident

OooovloRichlo
Androo Rlggo

Rtndy Hammond

.UI!HRoo

Cindy Harrington

Ktulnlca Han

Nlftcy flloH
Pwlny 8egtt
Pall~ lllllbury

Monil E. Halklns
B. J . Holley

Lily Holloy

Olll'lnl ltftdlfl

Kathy Hutfmtn
Pn.u:lence Humphriylli

Connie ltundert
IAon ltunden
Aldllfd loolt

OsiiJon•
Larry l •
Julio Lynd1

Klmlh,......., lhOjllllonj

JoiiPo1Toclo01t
t ..my Thoclow
Wllml Thtlliton
WoncloiTh-

KoUovMclll1ridl

Jolin McNoiM

lilt\' Jo Mudows
nmMMdows

M... Tuotoy
lolwyft R, WI!IIO

Frlr'lk H. Mllll, Jr.
Ptt MHit

Corio Mink
Conottto Mhcl&gt;oll

Phyllt!! Wllooxon

Plfft WlltmM

&gt;,

'1
j ·

-·lloofto W-ood. Jli

John Mutford

on U.S. 52 In Adams County.

Salunlay
Orrville: LloYd R. Lehman, 22,
Orrvllle, In a one-car crash on a
street In Orrville, Wayne CountY.
WashiJigton Court House: Estelle
Hanis, 65, sabina, In a tw&lt;H:ar
collision on U.S. 35 In Fayette
County.
Mansfield: Ronald C. \\lolfe, 23,
and Shirley Cook, 51, both from
Mansfield, In a two- vehicle accl·
dent on a Richland County road.

CINCINNATI tUI'Ii - It was a
lyplcal pre·holiday highway mad·
ness on I.75 lh rough Cinci nnali, in
the parking lols or nearby mails and
on most of lh&lt;' olherroudways In lh&lt;•
viclnily or shopping urea s.
Tra ffic was bumix'r-lo· bumJX'r,
slop-and-go- moving a maxim um
of 15 mph - as moslly ou l·of·
towners crept lhrough th~ holli&lt;'·
neck on 1-75Salurday morning and
aflernoon.

Friday Nllht

There were no accidenl s on which

Columbus: Judy AnnRoberts, 38,
Columbus, In a three-car pileup on
an east side Columbus street.
Columbus: Gerald E. SuUivan,
51, Colwnbus, when struck by a car
on the east side~ Columbus.

Approximately 15 firemen from
the Rutland Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment were called about 9:30Sunday
morning to the Randy Searles·
resklence on Main St. In Rutland.
First Lieutenant Jerry Black or
the Rutland VFD reports that
heavy damage was Incurred to the
front portion of Searle's muse

traDer.
There was no one home at the

time the fire started Black says and
no tnjurles'were as~Jated with the
!Ire.
,
'!be origin ci the fire Is believed to
have been electrlcal appllanres
which were lefl on.
Black estimates about $15,00!
ANTIQUE ANTIMATED PJCl'URE - The
worth or damage to the home.
rocking horwe rocks, the Ieddy hear's head moves,
Rutb)hd had three trucks on the
scene. Middleport Rescue was · and the chlldl'ea peek In and oul on lhls anllque
antbnaled c::brWmaa plclure ~~splayed ill the
called to assist.

-

I·

blamt• lhc mrss. Proplr in
campers und stalion wagons, many
wilh Michiga n a nd Onlarlo llcrnsr
plales. hcadrd sout h, mosl likely 10
Florida, whcrr· Grandmas. rondos,
bowl games, and ,VI'S. sunshine,
beckoned.
Two vehicl~s wil h F'lorlda iltt'nSf'
plales also craw led slowly
southward.
Staying off 1·75 did nol mean
stay ing oul oft raffle. however.
Sprl ngdule police repo rt ed
bumper·lo-bump&lt;'r lrafflc in the
Tri -Counly Mnii arcu .
Cars Wfi'C back• '!I up from exll
ramps onl n lhc highway Itself, he
said, most1,1 onloweslhound 1·275at
the Ohio 7i7 Pxit s.
10

$15,000 fire hits home

W.,....f. lhtett
~Motta .... l!llold

lry~ Martk'l
.
KoU!ryn Mo!!Oio
C.rrol H. McKwla

Holiday madness
hits Cincy's 1-75

Mlddlepori Deparirnenl store. The picture was lound
illlbe attic ofthestore·severalyearsago.lt lsbeUeved
to be more than 50 years olcl and used when
Rathbums operated lhe store.

•'

•'

combine crop price supp011 s wilh direct subsidies,
are frozen and then reduced starting In 1987 for cotton
and nee and In 1988 for wheal and corn.
During congressional debate, Rep. Byron Dorgan,
D·N.D., complained the bill falls to target financially
st ressed medium· sized farmers and that "the blggesl
chunks of money go to the biggest producers."
The bill also exlends supporls for wool, sugar,
peanuts and honey.
A histone part of I he bill will pay farmers to take up
to 45 million acres of the most highly erodible
cropland out of production and plant It with trees and
grass. Farmers wUI have until 1995 to practice
conservation on other erodible land that remains In
ctops.

Miller labels bill
a 'historic step'

COLUMBUS- Several months ago, parents .In the
New York City borough of Queens became upset
when II was reported that several chlldren with AIDS
(Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) had been
admitted to the public school gystem.
The disease. which Is usually transmitted by an
exchange of body Oulds or the used dirty needles, Is
usually lata!.
To coinbat the potential for a similar problem In
Ohio, the State Board of Edu~atlon and the Ohio
Department of Health have"iifawn up guidelines
governing the handling of students with AIDS.
"As you are well aware the occurrenre of AIDS In
children In Ohio has been extremely rare," Dr.
Thomas Halpin, Assistant Director cl the Ohio

I

• Olympic Free Weights
·• Single Station Weight Resistance
Machines

WE'RE HERE TO
HEALTH YOU UP

abeaaoi.Wet....,...tldat._

~
7
·~dl;~ ./

With this .in mind, we at
Pleasant Valley Hospital have
opened to the community a
wellness center.

•

~ ..,. ....... ddl.......

b~ ..

Having a. he~lthy lifes~le can add years to your life.
And staymg 1n shape 1s one key ingredient of a
"healthy" life.

•

•JIMPleeverywlloft!deiJtllalla

~­
~~ "

~ .

•

�•
I

The Daily Sentinel
~~ r-n....~ .....-.-.~c::l·""'
~v

•

ROBERT L. WJNGETr
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Rfanager

PAT.WWTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less tha n 300 words
:long. All letters are subject to IPdltlna: and,must bP signed with name, addre!!sand
te lephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Lf'ners should be In

iood taste, addressing Issues, not personalltlei.

Sleigh bells on
the Potomac
Just In tbne for the last delivery from the North Pole, Washington
Window finished Christmas shopping for the folks who supply It with grins
arid and groans throughout the year. Here, with affection. Is the list: For
President Reagan - A complete vldeocasette library d. "That's
IncrEdible" In recognition of his starring role In the rescue of the
Democratic tax reform bill from the clutches of Republican terrorists.
For VIce President Bush - Good health for the leaders of foreign
countrtes. Too many overseas funerals In the next year oc so rould play hob
with plans to see America (New Hampshire, Iowa, etc.) first.
For Nancy Reagan - Good health for the leader of this country. She's
done'her share of hospital visiting.
For White Hoose Chief r1 Staff Don Regan - Lwrh with wrestling
~ Wendl Richter, a lady who definitely will be able to show him a
thiDg or two about throw weight.
For Lucky, former First Dog - Lots r1 ~. rabbits and room to run.
For Rex, the new First Dog- Aseat d. his own on the helicopter. Lucky's
habit ct. Jumping Into the First Chair on Marine One was said to'be one d.
the things that got him exlled to "dog heaven" In California.
For lonner White Hoose SOOJrlty adviser Bud McFarlane and former
HHS Secretary Margaret Heckler- Rear View mirrors. Next tbne they'll
be able to see who's sneaking up on ,them.
For Attorney General Ed Meese- A ride In the ·:Back To The Future"
Del.orean. Now he'll be able to find out for hbnself what the Foondlng
Fathers bad In mind when theY wrote the Coostltutlon 199 years ago.
For Defense Secretary Cap Weinberger - A $3 screwdriver, a SJS toilet
seat and a Do-It-YourSelt manual. Gramm· Rudman budget cuts are
cornlng.

For the Amly-AKentucky squirrel rifle. That'swhatthereaiSgt. York
did his best work with.
For Agrk:ulture Secretary John Block - An explanation for Midwest
farmers about bow much better off they are mw that Inflation bas been .
whipped.
For the CIA - A Diners' Guide to French restaurants too far from the
Soviet embassy for a redefector to make It on ixlt.
· For the IRS- A computer with a money-back guarantee.
For GOP chairman Frank Fal1rt!nki:Jp(- Congiesslonal seats In Indiana
and Texas. He was promised them last year, but the· nasty Demx!rats
grabbed them.
·
For..Democratlc chalnnan Paul Kfrk - A right tum signal. Some
J:lE:mocrats claim he made several r1 them last year without ootjce to his

pasaengers.
For foi1DI'I' Sen. Howard Baker - Somebody ID remember before 1988
woo led the Senate when practically all the Republicans and some
Democrats as well voted for Reagan programs.
For White House spokesman·Larry Speakes - For one whole day. no
questions.
For ABC correspondent Sam Donaldson- A gas mask. He'll never get
those smokers In the White House press room to kick the habit.
One gift to go to New York:
FortheStatueofUberty- Anew torch, a set &lt;iwatertlght seams and a
long term lease at the same old stand.

Reagan again seeking
aid for Contra rebels
President Reagan once again Is embarked on a campaign to drum up
u.s. military aid lor rebels seeking to overthrow the Marxist Sandlnlsla
government In Nicaragua.
The days of covering government tracks on overt and covert aid are
gone. Reagan designates rebels against the Nicaraguan regime and the
Angolan regime as "freedom fighters" and proceeds from there.
So tar, Reagan has said that there will be no Amertcan ftghtlng men
Involved In the drive to de-stabilize the "dictator In designer glasses" as he
calls Sandlnlsta leader Daniel Ortega. But past history Is a constant
reminder that military aid can be translated eventually In soldiers on the
scene. VIetnam Is the classic example.
Since he took ctt.tce. Reagan has tried to promote democracy In Central
Amerlco and to lend powPrful support to govertunent forces In El Salvador
and to the rebels fighting the Nicaraguan government.
Although Congress the last time arourxllbnlted Reagan to providing $27
million In noil· lethal aid to the Insurgents fighting the Sandlnlstas, It
a~rs he believes that lawmakers wDI become m&gt;re agreeable to
milit ary aid In the coming year.
As the pressure has Increased oo Managua. tl-e regime has becoine
more and more oppressive and coercive. denying the people many of their
rights,censoring the press and lntbnldatlng the mmlnant Roman Catholic
Church.
· To bolster his case. Reagan says tbatsome3,(B)Cuban military advisers
are with the Nicaraguan troops "down to the smallest unit."
.Reagan launched his new campaign for military aid for the Contras by
charging "there's a cause lor deeper concern- the specter d. Nicaragua
transformed Into an International aggressor nation, a base lor subversion
~Vld terror."

Letter to editor
Editorial told it like it is
I am writing with regard to the
editorial In the Dally Sentinel
Monday Dec. 16th. Titled, "MpreTo
Ethics F1ap Than Meets The Eye".
111e author of the editorial hit the
nail squarely on the head.
·'l'be Charleston Gazette has a
coiumn called "Smiles and Scowls"
that gives smiles' to people who
render good deeds and scowls tot he
J:iii!l guys. Perhaps we should have
such a column In the Sentinel and
gt~e a great big smile to the

•

Jets, Patriots, 49ers clinch
NFL playoff berths Sunday

·.· BOren's PAC ·p)an ______,.------w_u_lia_m--:-F~.B_uc_k_ley_J_i:

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

editorial writer lor telling It just like
ltls.
A!IYon~ who has worked In state
government In an unclal8llled
position knows the rules, be It
Democrats or Republicans In
power. This may rot be the best
system rut 11 has worked pretty
well for both parties lor a long tbne
and Isuspectltwlllrontlnuelntothe
future.
· Hellljl L . Hunter

Sen. David Boren of &lt;Jtlahoma

paid speeches and write ·books and
articles and mntinues as a partner
Jn his la:w flrril, he Is going to nm

has a bill up that would llmlt the

spending by PACs oo Individual
candidacies. What Senator Boren Is
saying Is what we have all been
rearing for so long, llllllll'ly that
PACs are dominating the wtes of
congressmen, which a few observa·
lions and a reminiscence:
1) In December of 1973, I bad a
telephone caD from Peter Peterson
asking me lb endorse a citizens'
conimlttee's call designed to II':·
compllsh two things. The first' was
. to limit the earnings a congressman
and senator would be permitted.
The second was to reward con·
gressmen and senators who, In
Peterson's opinion, were under· .
paid. His reasoning was that If a
legislator rontinues to give high-

· Into a confllct of Interest.

I regret deeply, In retrospect, that
I gave Jl!Y name to a reforin that
turned .QUI ID be nmch less than
that. Because from that general
Impulse grew the Idea that lndlvld·
ual cOntributors ID a political
campalgn should be limited In what
they could give. That dispute ended
In a lawsuit, and the &amp;lpremeCourt
ruled, In Buckleyvs. Valeo, that one
couldn't constitutionally llmlt the
sum that Candidate Jones spends
on his own candidacy If It comes
from his own pocket; or the sum
Citizen Smith spends to advance the
policies with which Candidate
Jones Is Identified, !X'OVIded that

particularly II you take Into account
that Southern seats are now
genuinely contested. This means
that £;ongress will be reluctant ID
limit PACs, which serve them so
well to stay where they are. And
wey do they care so much about
staying where they ~?
31 ln part they care because the
Peterson Protocol has ·had a most
serious effect on :'eongressmen.
They are told that they cannot
pursue other Interests; Indeed, In
effect that they cannot keep other
skills boned. It becomeS, then, a
supreme matter of concern for
trem that the). should achieve
re-election: because acting as
oongressmen Is, after a while, all
they know how to do. Traditionally
In America men would go to
Congress fllr a rouple of terms and
then go back to what one used to call
the "real world." Back to business,
back to law, back to the acadeJl!Y,
whatever.

Smith Is rot acting In collusion with
Jones.
2) The situation gave rise to two
phenomena. The first, of course,
was the PACs. They are organizations whose function It Is to roundup
·all the Citizen Smiths they can find,
get nnney from them, and spend
that money to elect Candidate
Jones. The PAC rontributlons to
. general elections seem to be
doubling every four years, and
Senator Boren Is correctly con·
cerned about the bnpllcatlons of
congressional dependence on
m&gt;ney-ralslng Issues.
But a sldeetrectdtbe PACs Is the
Increasing Immobility ot Congress.
II l!i easler to mise money for an
Incumbent, and the re-election rate
threatens to reach an all-tbne high,

~ IRS

Last week, the figure by which
senators are p&gt;rmltted to augment
thetr Income was raised by $7,500.
(NOTE: At this writing, the
augmented Income lor SL'IIators has
not yet been signed Into law.) That
Is a step In the right direction. But Is
doesn't go far enough. The republic
.has a stake In a congressman's
oontlnulng to engage hbnself In
otl-er activity tha.n law-making.
There Is, In fact, much sentiment
that would limit the terms r1
congressmen to eight years, or 10, '
oot the possibility of such a
reform's being passed Is approxl·
mately zero.
The reform truly needed Is :
Intimately bound up In the ethos d.
government. The other day, on one .
of the morning talk shows. House
Republican Minority Leader Robert Michel was talking about the
vote on tax reform. What be said
was that he himself bad "voted
(his) district"

AUPiTIN6

"It's come to our attention that you've been claiming some extraordinary
amounts for charitable contributions.~·

ESTABLIIHES NEW RECORD- Kansas City
Cblels wide reooiVer Stephone Paige smDes after
catching a pass from quarteriJaclt Bill Kem\v to
esiahllsh a new NFL reeord lor number of yards

.
troyed, were Involved In anotl-er we were advised that the mechanic junkers.
"During
the
p&gt;rlod
of
March
1981 •
accident, with 10 of them having bad acquired the helicopter again
three or more accidents." In an t&gt;llowlng the latest accident, by to March 1984, (the ~ense
additional sample of 33 choppers · purchasing the wreckage from the Department) sold sullllus hellcop- ·
"that had been destroyed at least Insurance mmpany. We were ter parts with an Inventory value of
once In a crash, we t&gt;und 23 had unable to locate the macbantc to $72 million for about $1.8 mllllnn,"
discuss the 1-ellcopter transaction." the report stated. Among the .:
been rehuUt a total d. :l6 tlines."
- Many owners r1 the helicopters purchasers were several FAACalling lor a crackdown, the
report stated: "Although It may not studied first . learned from the certllled repair shops.
The FAA took Issue with the IG
be possible to prove tl-e rehuUdlng government Investigators that their
practices and d:JcuJnentation are choppers had been rebuilt from report's conClusiOns, clabnlng that :
fraudulent, theY are unauthorized junk, because the repair logs many of the accidents to patchwork:·
planes were due to other factors
and clearly misleading to the omitted that vitallnformatlnn.
In one case, a helicopter that was and could mt be traced to the fact
general public."
Here are some examples cited In wrecked In a New Jersey accident that theY had been rebuilt from
the report of helicopters that have In l977 was rebuUt In Florida In 1981 wrecks.
risen, phomlxllke, from their and sold. "The present owner
The IG report noted this objecscorched, twisted, and sometimes advised us that he was unaware tion, rut pointed out that there had
that the aircraft bad been In a· been a "30 percent Increase In the
bloodstained wreckage:
- At the request d. tre pilot serious accident. ... The repair rate of mechanical failure acciowner, a certified mechanic rebuilt station In Florida advised him that · dents following the rebuUdlng of
a helicopter that had been des· the aircraft had only sustained a these destroyed 1-ellcopters."
troyed In an accident. Less than hard landing," the IG report stated.
The F,AA Insists that more
tour months after the helicopter
- The military must bear some regulations won't stop those who
was rebuUt It was destroyed again of the blame for the recycled already Ignore existing rules, and
1-ellcopters. It sells huge quantities accmes the Insurance Industry of '
In a crash that killed the lftlt.''
The tragic tale didn't end there. r1 SUilllus choppers and parts for a contriooting to the problem by ,
fraction d. their original cost. These selling wreckage Instead of destroyThe report continued: "In addition,
bargains are then used to reblilld Ing lt.

.

.

Good for What ailS it?_ _ __ __Do_n

..:..:..Gra-.:!:Lifj:

UNITED NATIONS (NEA) - Tbe
year 1955 was an especially big one
around here in one respect.
The world organization gained 16
new members at a single swoop. And
It hasn't been the same since.
In the previoua 10 yean, only nine
countries had been Invited to join the
original M United Nations. The 1955
influx wu a package deal In wblcb a
number of World War Ill01en, aeveral neutrals and a scatterln11 of former
colonies were admitted simultaneously, significantly lnflatln11 tbe orpnlza·
tlon's membership and decillvely altering Its character. It wu no longer
essentially a metamorpboiiJ of the
wartime grand alliance dominated by
the victorious great powers.
For one of the 16, Austria, which
had just emerpd from a decade of
lour-power occupation, admlsaloo to
the United Nations bad apeclal
significance.
"It was," says Gerald Hlnteregger,
"the general recognition of our sovereignty, of our Independence."
Hlntereuer Is secretary-general
for foreign affairs, the top non-polltl·
cal pooltion In the Austrian foreign
ministry. He penonally checks In at
the United Nations every year becaUJe, be says; that's the only way to
fully undentand the "quite unusual"
lntiUiutlon that It Is.
One of the things that needs to be
understood Is that Austria is far from
alone In .attaching great significance
to meD;Ibenhlp. For many other countries, especially thole emerclng from
oolonlal status, admlsalon.to the United Nati- means acceptance as a lull
and equal member Into the family of
natloiul.
The consequences for the United
Natlonsltaelf. however, have not been
entirely advantageous. Membership
has swollen to a cumbenome 158. This
Includes mlai-ltates with popnlations
less than those of a small city but that

are theoretically the equals of the
world powen. And that has 1~ to talk
of drastic correctives, most of wblch
Hlnteregger views as cures worse
than the ailment.
One, weighted voting to benefit
large countries, would mean, In effect,
different categories of members.
There is already quite enough of that
OD the Securily CouncU, where fiVe natiODS bold the prlvUeced pooltloo or
permanent membenblp.
"Either this II a 111vorelgn body or It
Is not," HlnleNfier arpes. "II you
accept the priDCiple of sovereignty, I
don't think you can dlstinguisb between bll ltates and even very amall
states."

found to have merit and on the feasiblllly of implementation ..
It would, says Hinteregger. be a
"great waite" not to make the effort,
especially since many suggestions
came I rom world leaders who paraded
to the General Assembly rostrum durIng the United Nations' 40th anniver-

WHaT! we MaY
Have FOUNP aciJRe FoR
YOOR caNCeR! WHOA!

Besides, any such arrangements
would necessitate revillon of the char·
ter that would be exceedingly difllcult
to accomplish.
·
It would be better, auggests Kinteregger, to take the charter as it is and
do everything p011lble within Its
terms to make the United Nations
more effective. The p011lbilities are
there, be believes. What Is required Is
an effort to realize them.
Austria bas come forward with a
propoul to that end that, at this point
at leut, Is simplicity ltaelf. For the
flnt time In the orpoiJation's history,
It would aystematically follow
through on the critic~ of the United
Nation's performance and on specific
propouis for Improvement.
One of the we~kneaaes of an organl·
zation as large and unwieldy u the
United NatiODS, says Hlntereuer, 11
that good Ideal disappear for lack of
follow-through.
The Austrlalll are proposing to rem·
.edy that with establllhment ol a small
task Ioree working wllblli the Secretariat. It would collect and study the
numerous suggestl- voiced during
the current General Allembly lM!IIIion,
repqrt to nest year's ~e~~lon on th09e

•

.'

sary observance this session. And Hinteregger takes this as an especially·
encouraging sign.
•
"After all," be reasons, "if It were:
such a bad organization not so many
leaders of th~ world would have taken·
the trouble to come to New York."

Goe§~

DON'T GeT €1o eXciTeD!

You earn Have iT.

reclvlng In a single game with elgllt catdles lor 009
yards. The olkd mark was 313 held by .Jbn BeOion of
tbe Cleveland Rams against Detroit Un H. UPL

night, rut lost the AFC West to the back Roger Craig Sunday rushed
Los Angeles Raiders and were the · for 72 yards and caught five passes .
odd-team out ln the three-way lor 50 yards to become the first :
tie-breaker for a wlld card spot.
Denver's conference record was
worse thim.those ol New York and
New England. Still, the Broncos
finished three games ahead of
playoff-bound Cleveland.
At East Rutherford, Johnny
Hector rushed for two short touch·
downs to power the Jets. The
Browns, &amp;8, had clinched the AFC
Central Saturday when division
rival Plttsturgh was beaten 28-10
by the Giants. Cleveland Is the first
team to win a division without a
winning record.
Also Sunday, the Miami Dolphins
clinched the AFC East title with a
28.0 rout of Buffalo. The Dolphins
wm host the Browns In the
divisional playcifs Jan. 4 oc 5. and
the AFC West champion Los
Angeles Raiders wW host the
wDd-card winner that weekend.
ln the NFC divisional playoffs,
Chicago hosts the wDd-card winner,
and the NFC West champion Los
Angeles Rams host NFC East
champion Dallas.
The Bears and Dolphins are the
only teams to repeat as division
champions. •
At San Francisco, 49ers running

player In NFL history to go over the :
1,!00-yard mark In a single Sllason
for both rushing and receiving
yards. He alSO scored on a 4-yard
run to set a team mark with 15 TDs
and help the 49ers overcome a 13-0 .
deficit.
At Miami, Dan Marino threw two
TD passes to Bruce Hardy ID give
the Dolphins a seven· game winning
streak entering the playoffs. Mia·
ml's last loss was against New
England Nov. 3.
In other games Sunday. Chicago
slugged Detroit 37-17, Kansas City
outlasted San Diego 3&amp;34, Green
Bay edged Tampa Bay 20-17,
Atlanta shaded New Orleans 16-14,
Philadelphia trtmmed Minnesota
37-35 and Indianapolis clubbed
Houston 34-16.
The Rams host the Raiders
tonight In the battle of Los Angeles . •
A Raiders' victory gives them tmi:
home field throughout the playoffs.
Bears 37, Lloll!l 17
At Pontiac, Mich .. Dennis Gentry
jolted Detroit by running the second
haH klcko!l 91 yards for a TD. · ··

.,
..

'

FOXBORO, Mass . . (UP!) After James' scortng nm pro- eight· of Its last 10 games. The
Craig James won't be home for vlded a 27·16 New England lead Bengals, 7·9, ended by dropping
Christmas and he's glad of it.
with 8:13 remaining In the game, lour of their last six games and
The New England Patriots run- the Bengals countered with Crls seven &lt;t their eight road coDtests.
ning back rushed for 142 yards and Collinsworth's 8-yard soorlng reAlthough Cincinnati was ellmlone touchdown Sunday to lead his ceptkm to draw within lour points. nated from the playoffs Saturday
team past the Cincinnati Bengals
But on a fourth do~m and less when the New York Giants defeat
and Into the NFL playoffs.
than two feet to go at the Bengals' the Pittsburgh Steelers, coach Sail)
"! don't mind being here for 42-yard line, Weathers.bounced off Wyche was happy with his team's
Christmas," said James after a the tight side \4 the line, moved to effort. '
34-23 victory In the regular- season the outside andwentdo~m the right
New England .led !l-6 at the half
finale. "Heck, I can go 11ome and sideline lor the clinching due to a pair of Tony Franklin field
enjoy Christmas In Dallas touchdown.
·
goals, a 50-yard smrlng rreeptlon
anytime."
·Patriots coach Raymond Berry by Stanley Morgan from. Tony
James had 25 carries, Including a said the right play had been saved . Eason, and a !).yard run by Tony
long gain of 36 yards, plus his · for tl)e right nnment.
·
Collins.
11·yard scoring run off a lateral.
Weathers says his duty Is to work
Before Collinsworth's score at
Robert 'Weathers added an Insu- efficiently ratl-er than provide .a 27-16, theBengals'otfensecorisiSted
rance TD on a 42-yard run with 1:52 dazzling dlspley.
mthree Jbn Breech field goals and
remaining.
After sUnday's victory, the goal . a 33-yard strike from Boomer
The Patriots wW lace ·the New posts were torn down when thou· Estason to rookie receiver Eddie
Ycirli Jets at 4 p.m. (EST) Saturday sands m spectators stormed the · Brown.
at the Meadowlands In a matchup field. Five fans were Injured when a
Since joining the NFL In 19'10,
of the AFC's two wlld-card teams: metal goal post they were carrying New England has reached post·
Cincinnati was a must-wbi ~lame away from the stadium hlt a high,· season play just four tbnes and lost
for. New England. A viCtory would tension wire. .
all three prevklus playoff games,
put the Patriots In the playoffs, a
New England finishes the regular but it confident James says this
kiss wookl have given ·nenver the sea5on.wlth an 11·5 record, winning year's team Is dlffert'llt.
second wild-card berth.

Dayton topsMiami,Bobcats triumph
By United Press Intemallonal
Three weeks ago, Miami d Ohio
whipped arch-rival Dayton by 13
points and It !qoked like the
Redsklns were beading for another
romp In Satunlay night's rematch.
Miami was enjoying a 44-27 lead
early In the .second baH, when
suddenly the Red§klns went cold
and Dayton got hot. The Flyers
oulsCOred Miami 22· 2 and went on
to a 70-68 victory.
In other Ofilo collegiate games,
Bowllng Green won Its first game
by beating Indiana State 62-57,
Loyola (Ill.) defeated Toledo 92·76,
Ohio University beat St. Francis
(Pa.) 9!).78, Xavier routed Wayne
State 84-69, Cincinnati beat Denver
66-48, Akron ripped Hiram 102-59,
Cleveland State ripped Eastern
Michigan 108-59, Central Michigan
beat Defiance 85-76, and ·Wright
State outscored Otterbein 78-71.
Also. Musklngum topped
Baldwin-Wallace 57-48, Wittenberg
nipped Capital 71-66. Heidelberg
beat Mount Union 87-79, Ohio
Northern defeated Marietta 65-53,
ruo Grande heat Central State 74-68
and Wetmlnster edged Walsh 64-62.
North Texas State defeated
Youngstown ·State 85-72 In the
coilsolation game of the Bayoo
Classic In New Orleans.
1n Dayton, the Flyers' sizzling
second ball rally avenged a 70-57
loss at Miami DeC. 4.
After the Flyers' 22·2 spljrl gave
them tl-e lead, Dave Colbert hit two
free throws and Negele Knight
added another free throw In the
cbslng seconds to boost Dayton's
advantage from 67-66 to 70-66 and
put the game away.
•Dayton. 4-3, got 21 points from Ed
Young, J91romColbert, and12from
[limon·GOOdwin and Knight.

Robinson added 11 lor Bowling halftbne. The Bearcats caught up
Green, 1-5. ·
early In the second hall and
.. ln Toledo, Loyola converted a gradually pulled away.
technical foul lrito six points In the
In Akron, Marcel Boyce led five
second hall and went on to Akron players In double figures
overpower Toledo 92-76.
with !l points as the Zips posted a
Loyola, up 10 points with 15 102-!il victory over Hiram.
minutes lett, soored oo a layup and
It was Akron's 37th consecutive
was fouled, tllen Toledo had ~ wln over Hiram In their 42· game
lfehnlcal foul which allowed Loyola · series. The last tbne Hiram won
another t&gt;ul shot and the ball after was 1n· the 1914·15 season. Akron Is
that
4-3.
Carl Golston scoied 31 points for
In Lafayette, La .. North Texas
Loyola. Toledo got 16 points from State broke open a close game just
after balftbne and J'Qlled to liD lli-72
Chris Poellnllz.
In Cincinnati, Walt McBride victory over Youngstown State In
saired 21 points and Ralph r.ee the consolation game of the 23nl
became Xavier's career assist annual Budweiser Bayou Classic.
leader In pacing the Musketeers to
ln Cleveland, Clinton Smith
an 84-Ql romp over Wayne State.
scored 22 points to lead four
Lee had 10 assists to boost his Cleveland State players In doubles
career total to 002; highest ever at figures as the VIkings, 7-1 and the
Xavier. Eddie Johnson scored 17 nation's highest srorlng team.
points, Riehle Harris added 14 and rolled over Eastern Michigan
Byron Larkin had 10 to help Xavier 1~59.
'
boost Its record to 6-1.
In Dayton, three Wright State
Also In Cincinnati, Roger players hit In double figures to lead ·
McClendon soored 19 points and the Raiders to their 24th straight
Myron Hughes got 12 of his 14 points home win, 78-71 over Otterbein.
In the second half to rally Cincinnati Mark Vest led the &amp;2 Raiders with
to a 66-48 win over Denver.
17 points. followed by Andy
Cincinnati, 4-3, trailed 22-18 at Warner's lS and Joe Jackson's 14.

touchdown which pul New Engliiitd(aiLeiUjef lbe
Benpls 26-16. The Patriots recordeCJ,~-?3vlctGry •
thus. cUnchlng a wDd-card playol! berth,. the NFL :

CLINCHES PlAYOFF BERTH- New Englllnd's
Craig James (32) Is congralnlaled wilb high llvelrom
teammate Tony Collins as be Is hoisted aloft by
Cedric Jones (83) alter scoring a fourth quarter

playcils. UPL

Arkansas captures Holiday Bmvl
DIEGO (UP!) - The Trainor's game-winner. The fresh·Holiday Bowl, for years a Brigham man had connected on 4- ol-9 In the
Young aerial showcase, again was regular season.
decided by the ball In the air. This
That kick gave the Razorbacks a
time It sailed through the uprights.
"I said a little prayer and I kicked 10-2 record while the Sun Devils fell
It," freshman Kendall Trainor said to 84 In the first Holiday Bowl
Sunday night after his 37-yard field played without BYU.
Redshlrt freshman Kent Bos·
goal with 21 seconds remaining
gave No. 12 Arkansas· an ~17 trom kicked three field goals lor
victory over unranked Arizona Arizona State, Including a 28-yarder
State In the eighth annual Holiday that put the Sun DevOs ahead 17·15
with 5: 23 to go. He missed a
BowL
· Trailing 17-15, the Razorbacks &lt;Esperatlon 59- yanl attempt at the
went 61 yards In 14 plays' for final gun.
. SAN

The Razorbacks took a 15-14 lead
with 9:37 to go, but Arizon a State
came back on Its next possession.
Starting from their 21. the Sun
Devils used Jeff Van Raapborst ·
passes d. 11 yards to Jeff Gallimore
and :ll to Aaron Cox to move within ·
Bostrom's range. The kicker, who
replaced the record·settlng Luis
Zendejas, easily nailed the 28yarder.

136

~•I•

l~t

oiOhll . O,.ptrtrnrnt

THE SERVICE DESK )
WILL BE CLOSED
TUESDAyI DEC. 2 4

ol Comphtncr

In ltan ~~~et ~~ thr1 1111~111 .tDPIOI)I!Itebnmrs~

llllfKIII/ed d~llnl lhl CUII,nll'iliiO 11111111:1 tn IIH~ ~~ il~ rtl IIWIDPIIJif
lill1111ru ol rmur~ncr on the m~t~lli Ph~ Its ltnanc ~at r.ondohl)(l ~
\tiOW~ by ~5 MIAUII llii!'!Tllfll 1u hiYf ~ ~ lolloon 0&lt;1 Dr.l;~orbPr ll

1984· Admrn~ mds. 178 9?4.194.610 00 trat.llllf'l, S/6 ~ ;t6~

96900. Surplu1, $1. 360.128 11)4 00 IJI(Uilf, !18 ~?9131616 00, f.,
pt~d~urb. $11.566300.89200 INWIINI S l't'H(R(!) I~~~' lifo
rwnto '~bluobed "'J n~rllfl .,d uu~ "'¥ 1t1l lo Ill' jjlnl'd 11
f.okjtnbuS.0'10 lhr1~1~1Ad1Ui f Gforl:f!llbt SuP! OIIA\UINIC'GI

...

t!li Stile ol 01110 ()Ppartm~ ol 1n1uranc~ ~~loti!, ol CllnpiJJnc•
fhe undtrS•I~~ ~pr11ntl'rlllfnl ol ln\Uranc~a lt h~ Stll•al{)luo ~t~
elry Cfl'!rl re51~11 0111TfOUIUICA III II $ COol '!\' 1lm•~RIIl[l S! ~t•ul()f
~n conrpllfl&gt;dw,thtllr lu~ult~r$ Sht~ ~o~l•tltlitiO tl lnd ~ hltmrrzlll
dUIIII(!frt,UIItnt ~~II IG t o~n~iiCI1111~ fl ~l ll!ol~ ippr~poo o.rl ~ b.o"'~
o t, nsu r~nu Ill I tnanc•lll ~ond1110n rs!Jri:Mn tl'J 11~ 1M~ II ~llll'llltlll tQ

The Daily Sentinel

IU~ ! !Jeff! 6 laiiO'III 11' Dt-c!mbt1 ll

1984 ~~~111 111ttf

1193 llli,l5 100 lllbhil~ Sl3l l l6.3~t00 SUrplu$, $~ 1!XX1'

::::::::::::::::::::::;~r;;•;;~mimfi,iiMjj~iifi;iiijiiiiiii•;jii11

i)XI 00: tnur~1r, SJG&amp;IS941 0Q L•~dllurM $?~ 1?3 61~11(1 tkl
ruds, 160.!XXI.00000 (I PI Ill $100:1000 00 I~ WIINlSS 'Mil' RIO!

1~nrhfr~nta,;ubso,IIHI 1111 narn~lnduuJM ITI) \t!ltobt llt, •l!d II
Columllr~ . 01110 ~~~ dl!' Ud dJ!f r..crg! l 11if
alln1u1,n~~ at

Ohll

••

!ill"'

lU Sill'" ol ~10 Otrplllm!'fll or ln~ur..,cr
The

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

Ce-lohe~l • ~I Con1plo.m(~
unrif:n,tll!d. ~tntendtnl oii11$Uioii!Ctolt~t Sllltol 01'10 rrt1

eov cer!lliP'l l ~i tWi itO• Stll U TIOIUl I IF( IJI S CO oi~~~O\~ gall!
l~r !lOIS Oll~i!o SUit I!IPICiillt lo &lt;I ~~~~~ IS

ot Wt has ccmolle!l"'rth

IIUI Iiontrdc!unnR lh' Wrtffll)l'lriO I/I(IUCtrnth~ r.lll!1!11PII!Oilf•lfe
blrsrnns otrn~urJnce II~ f i ~Jnuli u1rldlll00 111/lo• n by •h ' '"'u'
lllllme&lt;tl to hh' ~n n kll'ow1 on Otwnber Jl. J9S4 Allmrttt!l

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NO.SE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

olln~utJnc~ Cttlllrult

undi!ISrRnf&lt;l. Su~r rnt~n~ent ot ln1ur&lt;~~Ct ~I me SIM,OI 01110, ~e!
ctrhlll'~ th&amp;t iU1 ,Aou c n~ t,.sco ol Om ahi. Sht'- ol Nf hn
ccmplll!d wiTh tn~ tw.; ol thr l Sl.tlf "Jllllrrii.M! !0 rt 1nd r! IU ihOI't!e&lt;l

•try

otrnsurance on lhP mutu.tl !Jitn ttl. frnn:••l londrt10n IS ~~Ml by rt~
NlnUII\IIIIm'ltnl klllnt btti\H loiiOW\on Df(ftnbtl )l. 1984 ~dtM
teo 1\lel!. ~ 1 19121)900 Lrll:llrl,.., J?~OI0. \6100. SIJrplu;
$11.111131 I)Q '"'Oft'll', 13&amp;491 OOlOQ lol)l'r.d~Uit'&gt; SJliJJ
601 00 IH WITNE SS WH!_R[Of I h~r! h!rtu~to \ijtJ.cn~t...,. "''"'
.nd CIW5eil my ~1110 bl' 1l11 o ~ •• ~tum bill. ()lliiJ I~• I ~ ind ~r
Gevl&amp;e f•bl! StJpt or l~&gt;urlncf ~~ Ohlll
177 SIJ!e ol Qh.o, ~111m~ ot lt1Witr1Ct. CfnriiCI!t 01 Cofrl~III(P
lhr ~ndfi' S•Cfl~. ~ptronltndtni ol IM&lt;irMttot liM&gt; ~~~~ol Oluo h~
~ tell~te~lhll 'RliOENTIA ( IUUIAIICECOOf Alflll~ ot ~~~~~
Statu iNJ. ~~ complttjj 11rlh lht lawsotth1 Sill~ Mll)lrc lbltl~rtt!KI tl

NOTICE

CALL (614) 992·2104
(304) '675-1244

'·

,IJO

duun~ th~ c ~nenltt!!

·Miami;
5-2. Harper
had thewith
game·s
top 1
s®rer
In Ron
a&gt;. Eric
1
l'fewsome added 18 and Ron
had 10 fllr the Redsklns.
·In b'llng Green, Brian Miller
sciored 18 points to spark Bowling
Green to Its first victory, a 62-57
CQ~J~Uest of Indiana State.
·Jbn Smith soored 14 and Anthony

•

By DAVE RAFFO
UPI Sports Wrller
Giants Stadium has stood for 10
years withOut being the site of an
NFL playoff game. Next weekend It
will bold two, which had originally
been scheduled fllr ~same day.
The NFL's two wDd card playoff
games were scheduled lor next
Sunday, but those plans were
altered when the New York Giants
and New York Jets earned the
borne field In the games. Because
both clubs play at Giants Stadium
In East Rutherford, N.J.. the
Jets-New England AFC wild card
game was switched to Satunlay.
On Sunday, the Giants host San
Francisco In the NFC wlld card
g~. The defending Super Bowl
champion 49ers were the last team
to qualify for the playoffs with a
ll-16 victory over Dallas Sunday.·
The 49ers are 7-1 In the playoffs
under Walsh, Including victories
over the Glarits en route to Super
Bowl championships In 1981 and
1984.
The Jets cllppe(l AFC Central
champion Cleveland 37·10 and the
Patriots dumped Cincinnati 34-23
Sunday to run their records to 11·5
and push Denver from the playoffs.
The Broncos finished 11-5 with a
27-24 viCtory over Seattle Friday

Bengals finish di~appointing season

Recycled choppers ___J_ac_k_A_nde_r_so_n_&amp;_D_al_e_Va:--n_At_ta.
WASHINu'TON - Helicopters
pieced together from cannibalized
wrecks are fiiUng tl-e air, with tl-e
result that many of these palm·
work choppers are crashing a
second, third or even l&gt;urth time,
according to the .Transportation
Department's Inspector general.'
After studying '188 l!ellcopter
crashes between 1972 and 191ll, the
Inspector .general recommended
over a year ago that the Federal
Aviation Administration, which
certifies helicopter mechanics,
tighten Its rules to lden~ the
chopper cannibals. But an FAA
spokesman told our associate Donald Goldberg an agency task force
Is still "looking Into the entire
problem.''
Meanwhile, the stltched-togetl-er
choppers continue to crash at a
slgnlllcantly higher rate than lactory originals, acoordlng to the
Inspector general.
01 the '188 helicopters studied, the
IG reported: "We ldentllled 64
helicopters that, after being des·

The Daily Sentinel- Page- 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, December 23, 1985

.sSttl, ~~ ~~011, Z6200

DINING lOOM Ol!lY.
Served with whipped potatoes, chicken
gravy, cole slaw, hot roll , butter &amp; coffee.
Sorry. no substitutes except beverace·wllh

$3 25
•

""~~dj!lD~I p!iU,C

CROW'S FAMILY .REST AU RANT

'

L'•~&gt;~~~oPS.

muer B600, Surptu1. ~!l ·

1S~9?1i00: tntome. 1' 4·"""·•1500. £•1l'-'lditurts U l.615.1~00.
SlU 3~9'6 00 Callll1l $3000.000 00 1NWITNESS Wlf[,

He! Mselt,

11£11. 1 havt heramto Mi!ocrtbfd my n~ Jlld CIIJS@CI m, WIIIO be
Jllt•fll•l Columbu, Ott.o l~l\d1y anddatt Gtof~e I 1be. Sui)! oll~'llll ,
~Ct

at Ollill

231 Sill~ ol Ohm Doptrlrnflll olln~url~lf

l•r1r'l~ llt

l~t ~nCtiSIC~I'II Wjl"•rnt~~J•~I ollnlutollltl' ~1 1~1'

ol ComDhlntt

Sill• ~I Ohoo. lrfl ·

•by ~trlilll'~ tfl.lt CO\ ON IA l!NSU f!ANCl CO Of CA ol Ana~~tm Stale 01 .

CA. ~~~ c.ornploe~ ~ ~~~ th•l~•~ oll~• l S! -1~ •Pr'•c•tll• to •I -"~ 'I inlho
mtd duunl lht cwent vrar ~ tllnlltl rn thrs ~t t t e ~\ IWOilftlle

busmesl o rrtovr1nt~ ~s lonin Col l condrhoft 1\ \ llown ~ tiiiMull
stl!trnenlto ~•~e tJetn II'&gt; to!tow1 011 Oecmbtt Jl, 19S4' Arlillrtted
nwh SB0.2!16?6000. 11ibol~re&gt; S49.6)1},'m0Q Sllr p~ t1, l45·
166 liQ !~me. $14 603 9S 7{)l ~lpendi!UIM\ $~21 2 00. Nl'IISSftl.,

Sl0. 6'5.,6600Cijirltl SHOOIIOOOO I~WI NESS WHE R£Cf' . I ~ N
httwnf(l sutl\ttrbe&lt;lm, nanrt ~nd ~~~~led my stal to lie all•t!l "te··
lun~t..n l)hll, lhrld.l¥tnddllt Gto!ttlabe.Sirpt ollmurtneto!OIIoq_

'•

�•Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, 0

Pomeroy-Middleport, O.hio

..

'

:ern

oo

team effort. Our hustle was really
great. We played a tight defense
and forced a lot of turnovers (30
SWHS turnovers)."
Southern ripped the nets for 50
percent, hitting 34 of 69 and 6of 11 at
the line. The Highlanders hit36of42
lor 36 pera&gt;nt and 6 of 12 at the line.
Southern had 23 rebounds led by
Kenny Turley with 6, whtle Jim
Jeffers had 9 of SouthweStern's 24
rebounds.
Soutl~m had 19 steals, 6 turnov·
ers, Bassists, and 17 personal fouls.
Soutnwestem had 4 steals, 30
turnovers, and 9 persorial fouls .
Turley had 5 of Southern's 19
steals.
Southern's reserves d. Coach Jay
Rees claimed a 47-34 triumph in the
prellmlnary to push their record to
a perfect 6-0.
Southern's varsity, also !).(), will
meet Ross Southeastern at Rich· •
mondale on Saturday, Decemher
28. The Peebles game slated lor
Ohio University's Convocation cen·
ter has been rescheduled for
Monday, ·December 30 at Chtlll·
oothe High School do to a schedul·
tng oonfllct.
Southwestern, now 1-6, next plays
In the Gallla County Holiday
Tournament on December 27-28.
Score by quarters:
Southern ................... 20 12 19 23

SWilL ......................

5

6 12 13

74

36

FOULED - Federal Hocking's Doug Kincaid (42) Is fouled by
Eastern Tone Chapman as he allempla lo smol during Saturday's
1101t-league eliCOUIIter at Eastern. 'lbe Lancers' Plill GDHan Is shown at
the rlghl. Kellh Barnhart scored 32 points to pace the Lancers to a n.s~
vldoey.

Box ecore:

SOUTHERN (74) -Scotl Wlckllnei ·0-2;
Todd Adams 6-0-12; Jay Bostick 2-6-10:

Dave Ambergey 6-0-12; Sean -Gru~er
2-0.4; Kelly Grueser 4-0.8; Kenny Turley

3-0.6; Richard Gilbride 3-0·6; Matt llarrls
3·0.6; Eric Milliron 3-0·6: Jamie Hensler
l·0-2. ror.u.s sU-74.
SOUTHWESTERN (118) - Jim Jeffers
3-2-8; Andy Halslop 2-1-5; Benny Boyd
4-2-10: John Woobum o.o.o; RickY Haislop
2-0-4; Dan Pati'tck 1-0 2: Dave Mershon
1-0-2: Dean McN~all-0-2 ; Roberr McCarty
().0.0; P .J . Halslop 1-1-3; Steve Tarbett

0·0-0. TGTALS 15-f-16

Lancers whip Eagles
By Scott WoHe
EAST MEIQl - Hitting six-of·
six free tbrllws durtrtg the last 50
·seconds, guard StaceyTatelcedthe
game for the Federal Hocking
Lancers here Saturday evening as
the Lancers handed Eastern a 71-sl
ron-league defeat. Federal Hock·
lng moves to 3-4 wlille Eastern
. drops 10 2-1.
Keith Barnhart paced the
winners with a game-high 32 point
effort, while Tate pitChed In 12, and
Phil Gillian 15.
· . Eastern.piaced three men In the
double-figure spotlight led ttl Eddie
·Collins wlth 19, Greg Leachman 18,
and Brian Durst 18. ·
Eastern was again playing without the service rl. sophomore point
guard Jeff Caldwell, woo under·
·went knee . surgery to OOITECt a
problem that developed from an
earlier accident. Caldwell Is ex·
peeled to return as soon as next
week.
·
The first half ~as quite a good one
as both-clubs battled head·to-head
In a combination of fastbreaklng·
patient, pattern basketball. Tied
much of the way Federal Hocking,
under Coach Tim Simpson, rolled to
a 19-17 lead.
·

Stolz eams
coach award
•

ROBINSON SCORE'! · Meigs' Brad Robinson goes In lor a t.w point
: play acalnst Doug HoHman (i Warren Local duttnglast Friday's TVC
: pme at Larey R. Monison Gym. Meigs contmued Is winning ways
: rib a 70-a vtetory.

.

:Rio tops Central State
Rto Grande College, down 5345 attempt and only one free throw.
: wlth 11: a.! left In the game, Smith finished with 26 markers.
: outscored host Central State 18-2 Wolfe added 20. Joe Verhoff tallied
: over the next seven minutes to lake 15.
Robert Wallace paced the
• a 63-55 advantage, then Wl'llt on to
: hand the Marauders a 74-68 non· winners with '!1 markers.
Rio Grande hit 25 of 50 field goal
conlerence setback Saturday night .
attempts for 50 percent. The
It Is belleved to be Rio's first
Redmen were 28 of 36 at the foul
viCtory ever at Central State.
: It was the hot shooting of Kent line. Central was 31 of 77 and six of
: Wolfe and Mike Smith which turned 12.
The Redmen had 34 relx&gt;urxls, six
· things aroond lor Coach John
by
Smith. Rio had 18 assists, seven
· Lawhorn's quintet, now 12·2
by
Wolfe, and only six turnovers.
:·overall.
Central had 36 rebounds, eight
: During Rio's comeback. the
:Redmen never missed a field goal each by 6-8 Charles Johnson and
Craig Durham. The Marauders had
21 turnovers.
Rio Grande will take part In the
7-Up Class!~ next on Jan. 3-4, in
Salisbury, N.C .
Akr Sl V ~. Lorain Cat11 ~
Akr C'~· How ~. Stew Wabf1 47
Box score:

. High school scores
Akr Buchtel M, LoulsvUt- Thomas 11
Ash C'rt'll\ic'lll 7.1. Norwalk Paul li't
BPik&gt;\rU(' 6.'t. Sa rd.l-5ky Pnklns ~2
' lblntman 50. Sl.IMn til
'BNan 71 , Shrrv.uod Faln-h· 00

·.

f\rl(')'(' Cm t 51. S Cmtrnl &lt;12

.
.
'•

Ruclu')t&gt; W 61. Wrlr rY..'V \ Madonna i'AI

Ca n Ht&gt;rlt&amp;IU" t:l. You1101 Ou {]
ran Md&lt;lnt')' ~. Alllanor ~

'I'OI'AUJI . . ..
Hallht IK'Oft' - Cmlral

Ca n 'nmk&gt;ft IH. Louls\111t

~5

~

Ca rmllton Ill. Marlil"/j1on 50
Castalia MarJrarrtla tiS, Pt~· mouth 66
Cmtl'ftlu111 &amp;1, ('ardlnRtOn 6.1
fiR Alkm
L.emorl Morroe til
rtn MorlkT 7l. Bt'a~rrek til
nn Princ:'t'lon 75. an SytamOfl&gt; 6.1
Cla!'k NE tf , rotroankS ~
fk' Sr JCX' 62. E C1t&gt; Shaw ~ HlO
(')('arfOI'k @(), Spa1·t.a HIRh!and 48
COidwat&lt;'l" 'r.l, WayrF TriCl' ~1
Col Waii&lt;""IIOO 61. Dubltn Ill
Col W£'hrlr "· Col l.!n!Fn .\1

:n. Rto..,;.

for
Keith Plpero1Denisongot
twothird.
first -place
votes and 13 points

EASTERN (88) - Ed Collins 7-5·19:
Timmy CaldwE'll, 0·11·0; Gn.•g Leachman

7·4·18: Tone Cha pman 2·3·7; Bryan Durst ,
9·0·18; Kevin Barber 3-0-6. TOT~LS
IIHHII.
FEDERAL HOCKiNG (711 - Keith
Barnhart 15·2·32: Jay Ethrldge3·0.6; Tony
Takach 2·0.4; Terry Deeter 0.0·0; Doug
Kin caid 1-0-2; Stacey Tate 3-6- 12; Nick

Watson 0.0-0; Phil Gillia n 7-1-15. TGTALS
!1-&amp;·11.

Col A"~ 57, Ok'l'ltan~· ~ 1011
Col Brooklwwn ~ . Da.v Jrtfrrson 75
Cor1 nth Ch r 18, Alu" Cllr fl
C:U~· F'alll 52. Akr E fil
OllnvUk&gt; 74 , Lltx&gt;rty Unb140
Day ME&gt;adawdalf 102. Troy IW
Dey C.rroll 52, Miami Trit'f ~
Day ChamJu l ~. Valk&gt;)''il'W \1
O.y Behrot !\'7 , Fort RE'ro\'l'IY !W
o.f\arlrf' 69, Bowllnft Gl"f'tln !'1.1

·Alfred happenings

By Gary Clark
until the four-minute mark when
Jeff Barnltz lgrllted a fourth "'· the local cagers began to pull away
period Waha!Rll White Falcon rally ··.. with some pressure defense and the
to break open a tight hardwood offensive productivity of Barrlltz.
confrontation Saturday night be· Wahama opened It~ biggeSt bulge of
tween the visiting Kyger Creek · the evl'!llng at 55.J9 with 1: 03
Bobcats and Coach Lewis Hall's remaining before ooastlng to a 56-45
Bend Area cagers with the White victory.
Falcons claiming a 5645 decision.
Wahama claimed the battle oft he
Barnltz notched 15 of his game- · boards with the White · Falcons
high 26 markers In the final stanza capturing 27 relx&gt;unds to 2llor the
togiveWahamaltssecondconsecu- Bobcats. Thompson was credited
tlve triumph In as many outings. with seven to lead the Waharna.
The &amp;-2 aenlor l01ward connected on
Kyger Creek got live rebourxls
10 field goals and a perfect six of six each from Bill Loveday and Tim
·at the charity stripe to Increase his Gordon tp lead the Bobcats In that
team leading scoring average to 23 department.
points per game. Barnltz tallied 20
1n the junior varsity contest,
!Dints In the White Falcons' 63-43 Coach Tom Cullen's LitHe Falcons
season opening win over Parkers- shot a warm 49 percent from the
burg St. Joe earlier In .the week.
noor lngalnlnganeasy57-19vtctocy
Matt Thompson also scored In over the Bobklttens.
double figures lor the second
The Little Falcons' duo of Brad
successive game lor WHS by Bumgardner and Robbie Grimm
contributing 17 points.
paced the WHS attack with 13 and
The Falcons continued to expe- 12 points respectively as Wahama
rlence an abundance of ball han· jumped out toa21.Qadvantageand
dling miscues as they did In their never looked back. The win gave
season ·· opener which kept the Wahama a 2-0 record while Kyger
Bobcats In contl'!ltlon for 2B min- Creek falls to 0.6 on the year.
utes of the 32-tntnute contest. WHS Chad Leach scored 10 of the
committed 20 tUrnovers an~ found Bobklttens' 19 points.
Itself tn further difficulty by
Kyger Creek plays Friday In the
suffef\llg through an ~tremely annual Holiday Tournament on Its
cold-shooting first half.
home floor while Wahama will be In
Kyger Creek also encountfl"ed the Eastern Holiday Tournament.
· the same problems, by committing
Box score:
'!1 turnoversandllndlngltsshootlng
KYGER CREEK (45) -Richie
accuracy on the chUiy side. Reggie Gilmore 5-4-14. Tim Gordon &amp;-~·14,
Gllmore and Tim Gordon shared BUJ Loveday 1-3-5, Rick Hudson
team high scoring honors for the 1-24, Mike Bradbury 2-04. Kevin
visitors with 14 points each.
Jolley 1.0.2, Chad Leach 1-0-2.
Neither team could get rolling T&lt;n'AIB 17·1 1-15.
of 1o !th
· WAHAMA (56) - Jeff Barnltz
throughout fl~t half• act n w
10-6-26, Matt Thompso.n B-1-17, Todd
tbe score afler one quarter being a
dismal B-8 deadlock. Kyger Creek Gress 1·3-5, Rlc)lle Clark 1.0.2, MtkEY
managed to turn a 1.3-ll deficit Into Wolfe 0-2·2. Troy Tucker 1.0.2, Btll
Marshall1.0.2. TOl'AIB 22-IU6.
a 19-13 advantage with ·an 8-0 spurt
Score by quarter.s:
midway through the second canto Kyger Creek 8 11 9 17 - 45
only to have the Bend Area cagers Wahama
g 11 12 25- 56
rally to knot the score at 19-19at the
Intermission break.
l)(olawaw ~\ , Nrowa rl. !il
Wahama came t In the second
Ol&gt;lplm Sl John ~1 . Elida' 43
E Knox 68. Utica~
half with some new-found hustle
E UVI.'I"plOI £.'\, CombrtdgP Ill
and opened up a l)-25 lead only to
EIS' r1a 63. San()Jk._~y :£
flndla.y 76. F'rmlon1 m
have the Bobcats close to wlthln
Fllonlmll&gt; 62, NPW Ek'mlm ~
three at .31·28 with eight minutes
Gahanna !:.!. Col Mltrun 47
.Ga llon 7'2. Rlvrr Val 48
remaining.
GA llon Northmor 69. MaRS Chr 48
The final period saw the White
Galllp:JII8 7'l. R.t:llck lllil 53
Gartk&gt;ld !Wi, Ravmna 6R
Falcons maintain their slim lead

oo

.

Eaglettes post SVAC victory
WILLOW WOOD- The Eastern
Eagleties of Coach Pam Douthitt
lifted their seasori·record to &amp;4 with
a big SVAC victocy over Symmes
Valley, 47·'!1.
Eastern 1$ now 5-1 In the league
and vecy much In the 198.'H!6 league
race.
· The Eaglettes were led by Senior
Amy Young, who tossed In 23
!Dints. Senior Margaret Horner
added 11.
Donna Wilson led Symmes with
13 !Xllnts,Lisa Howard added 8.
Margaret Homer dominated the
boards with 14 rebounds, Amy
Young had 10, Arlene Ritchie 5,
Lesa Rucker 4, Savoy 2, and Wigal

lor 31 percent,while canning 16 of 35
from the line. Symmes hit 5rl.17for
29 percent.
"We really hustled tonight," said
an elated Coach Pam Douthitt. "We
did a lot better with our turnovers,
cutting them down to 13. We played
a good game. I was really pleased
with our overall defense."
Eastern had 15 steals,5 assists
and 19 fOuls.
EHS won t)le reserve !fdme 28-18.
EHS Is Idle until Jan. 2wren 11
faces Oak Hill in a league contest.

Game rescheduled
The Southern-Peebles boys' high
school varsity basketba:ll contest
has been post!Xlned until Morxlay
night, December 30 at 6: 30 p.m. at
Chillicothe High SchooL Originally
the game was slated Friday at Ohio
University's Convocation Center.
Southern play~ Ross-Southeastern
this Saturday at Rlchmondale.

2.
Eastern rolled to a 144 ltrst
period lead, but slipped to a narrow
17·14 margin at the half. A potent
1().() thrkl period and blls terlng :al-13
pace In the finale produced tbe
margin of victory, 47-'ll.
The winning Eaglettes hit 15 of 4B

Hoop shoot

winners~~------­

chosen at Racine
RACINE - Racine Elementary
School recently released the
school's winners In the annual
'Hoop Shoot' contest. These
winners advanced to the district
competition at Galllpolls recently.
Jeremy lmlx&gt;den won the B-9 year
old boys dtvlsion,Eddle Sawyers
won ti-e 10.11 age group, and Andy
Hill claimed top honors In the 12-13
age group. 1n the girls' division
Mary Jo Wolfe won the B-9 division,
Megan Wolfe captured the 10-11
girts division. There were noentrtes
In the 12·13 range.

----~---------------,

.

MOM PERRY'S
BOUNTY TABLE

Strahm and {:!nclnnatl's Dave
Currey each got one first-place
vote.
"I just think it was a fabulous
accompllslunent by the kids," Stolz
said ol BG's season. "Going 11.{),
being the first Mid-American Con·
terence team to win nine league
games and for a whUe we were
nationally ranked.'.'

138 WASHINGTON S11EET

RAVENSWOOD, WV.

NEW YEAR'S EVE
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31st
3 P.M. 'TIL 8 P.M.
Frog Legs, Shrimp, Fish. Crab Legs, ·Oysters, Popcorn Shrimp, Barbequed Rlbaand Fried Chicken, Seled Bar end De11ert Ber. •

"DANCE FOR JOY"

SMORGASBORD
ONLY

AEROBIC DANCE CLASS
9 WOK WINTD SESSION

18 CLASSES FOR '36.o'o
ClASSES START JANUARY 6. 1986
CARlETON SCHOOL - SYRACUSE. OH.
MON. 8a FRI. 4:30 TO 6:30 - 6:30 TIL 7:30
TUES 8a THURS. 6:46 TO 6:46
FOR REGISTRATION PH. 992-3794

$599

Friendly Gardeners meet
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Burris

Burris anniversary to be noted
NEW HAVEN- Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Burris, New Haven, wUI
celebrate tt-elr 60th wedding anniversary with an open house on
Sunday, Dec. 29 from 2 to 4 p.m. at
their home.
They were marrted in New
Haven by the Rev. G.W. Simpson,
Dec. 31, 1925.

. Several out-of-town guests were
here for the recent wedding of
Tamara Ervin and James R Hupp.
TIJey were Mr. and Mrs. Roy Ervin,
East Liverpool, Mt. and Mrs. John
Buckley, Proctorville; Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Jones, Letart, W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Botkins,
Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Dave
Hudson . and Heldt, Henderson,
W.Va.; Mrs. Della Stewart and
Lori, Cheryl and Jessica Walker,
Point ·Pleasant, W.Va.; Jvauna

Gheen's Painting Inc.
P.O. Bax 241, Racine, Ohio-949-2685

f.;:=====================:;

I

Whpse birth~
IS 1t, anyway.
111 ~~ w~ n·ldui U' lhf bmh of JriiU!o C: h ro11

The Epia top•l Church

., .

Hospitalized

'

Brandl Fortune, lour-year-old
.daughter of Shelly Fortune, Syra·
cuse. Is a patient at Children's
Hospital In Columbus. She is . In
Room 302 and cards may be sent to
her. In care of the hospital.
·

Attending services

Divorces granted
POMEROY

Student
on list

TOPS 1456 meets

.

The EpiKOp.JI Cl\u1ch Ul 1~ vu 11'1~ •m port..lol news al Clu.slmJI" n,,,
who tnmtl dl!Wn tilf dumnry, but "'· h oc ~m~ down hom hr.l•fn W,· ~n• lil' 1·nu Ill •umc ,md 11&gt;1 n

won the door prize. Officers' reports
were given and thank you ootes
were read from several shu tins lor
holiday remembrances.
Margaret Eddards repOrted on
the judge's score sheet lor the
recent flower show noting that ~
club received a score of 92. A copy
of the by-laws were reviewed and a
committee was na111ed to do some
amending to them. A flOwer book
brought by Margi Davis was
enjoyed. Flowers were sent to Joan
Stewart.

Christmas gift wrappings were
judged at the recent holiday party
of the Rutland Friendly Gardeners
beld at the home ol Janet Bolln. ·
Preceding the party, the group
went to a GaiUpolls restaurant lor a
diriner. Winning the gift wrapping
prizes were Charlotte Willford,
first, Judith Hill. second, and Judy
Snowden, third. Secret pals were
revealed with the gilt exchange and
new names were drawn. Lori
Barnes won the traveling prize
brought by Iva Sisson, Joan Fetty

Lidel, New Haven, W.Va. ; Joyce
Eno!f', St. Albans, W.Va.; Sharon
Hargraves, Tammy Stewart,
Camp Conley, W.Va. and Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Snow, Shade.

Relatives from out of town
attending memortal services held
here fort IV;' late Howard Ebers bach
were Mrs. Louanna Wilcox, Can·
ton, Conn:; Mr'. and Mr5. Tom
Ebersbach and son, Orchard Lake,
Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Ted Roberts,
Ostrander, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Ebersbach, Newark, Ohio; Mr. and
Mrs~ Mike Ebersbach and family_
,
Baltimore, Ohio; Terri Ebersbach
and daughters; Mr. and Mrs.
Wlltenberg University, Spring· · Michael Grilley, Lancaster; Keith
filed, Onto, recognized full -time Ebersbach, Columbus.
students achieving an academic
average of 3.66 or higher during fall
term by naming them to the Dean's
List.
_Nancy Vance was named Miss
Named was Rodney Childs Little· Chrlstmastlme at Tuesday night's
field son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel H. meettngo1TOPS1456, Rutland. Top
Littlefield, Rt. 1. Racine.
losers for the week were Sandy
Wittenberg Is a private liberal Sargent and Linda Bailey. There
arts university of 2,150 students will be no meeting on Christmas
affiliated with the Lutheran Church Eve. Weight·in will be held on New
I
in America.
Year's Eve from 5:30 to 6 p.m.

A divorce has

been granted 1n Meigs Coonty

Common Pleas Court to Monld L.
Good, Long Bottom, 'from Donna J.
Good, Long Bottom, on grounds of
gross neglect of duty.
GRADUATES- Pvt. Jolm M.
Cremeans, son ol Teresa· Cremeans, Mlddlepori, 1111d the late
J. J. Cremeans, has graduated
as an honor soldier lromtl!ll U.S.
Anny's 4th Training Brigade at
Ft. Knox, Ky. Only a lew ollhe
200 graduates received the tqh
award. After spending the hoiJ.
days at home, .Cremeans wiD
begin advanced Individual trainIng at Ft. IA!e, Va., on Jan. 3.

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH

•

326 East Main Sl., Pomeroy, Oh.

•

CHRISTMAS EVE HOLY
10:,30 P.M.
. EliCHARIST.

OVP staffs· have holiday party
The annual Christmas party of
the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. was
held Thursday night at the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
Organ music during the dinner,
served by Circle's Catering Ser·
vice, was provided by Armand
Turley. James Souisby was master
of ceremonies for a Christmas
tbeme program accompanied by
Jennifer Sheets. Vocal and Instrumental selections, comedy and
dance numbers were presented by
Soulsby. Linda Mayer, Bob and
Deb! Buck, Mayla Yoacham, and
Denver Rice. An appearance by
Santa closed the program after
which a number of door prizes were

awarded. Glfts were presented
from the employes to Robert
Wingett, publisher, and Pat Whitehead, assistant publisher·
controller.
Attending the party from the
company's three newspapers, the
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, the Point
Pleasant Register and The Dally
Sentinel were Fred and Paullne
Hoffman, Judy Ryan, Hl'llry Raybum, Brian and Shirley Billings,
Phyllis and Tom Roach , Cleo
Lelvlng, Otho and Libby Mattox,
John Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Wright. Betty, Ray and Paula Tope,
Helen Davis, EDen and Vernon
Deweese. Emma Lou Davis, Helen

and Gay land Bush. Becky Koehler,
Cindy and Don Coleman, Tammy
and Ed Moore, Beverly and Hobart
Wilson, Margaret Finnicum, Debbie and Tom Skinner, Pat and
Larry Boyer, Bob Wingett, Judy
and Damon Morgan, Erma and
Gacy Lyons, Charlene and Bob
Hoeflich, Steve and Cozle Halstead,
David Harris, Katie Crow, VIcky
and Gary Clark, Jeffrey and Goldie
Carson, Barbara Riggs, Pat and
Kitty Whitehead, Kevin Whitehead,
Margaret and Blli Lehew, Dian and
Keith Caillhan, Nancy and Mayla
Yoacham, Paul and Terra Barker.
Mark, James and Gall Bowen,
Scott Wolfe and Amy Littlefield.

5Jt JACI&lt;SON Pfi&lt;E·RtJS WEST
Phonl 446-4524

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 145-llall

A Dlvlltlon of MuUimedla, Inc.
Publlsht."d evtf:\' aftE&gt;rnoon. Mond3y
th rough FridaY. 111 Court St.. Po·
m er~·. Ohi o, by thP Ohio Valley Pub-

lishing Companyi Mulll mt'dla, rnr-.,
Polll(lroy. Ohio 45769, Ph . 912·2156. Se·
con d. class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio. ·
MPmbrr: Un iU&gt;d PrPSs ln!Prnatlonal,

I
I
I
I

I
I
I

!

SalE'S. 73.1 Third AvenuE',

R

Advt'rtlsln~r Repr esrnt atlv{', Bra nham
Nrwspa~r

Nf:'W York, N~ 't'ork 10017 .

POSTMASrrn: Send addrf'Ss rh a n~ts
to ThC' Dally S.:Ontlnl'l, 111 Court Sl ..
Poll¥'roy, Ohio 457m.
SVBSCRimON RATE!

By Carrier or Motor Route

One w..k ................................... $1.10
One Mon th ........ .. ....................... $4.110

Onf' YcJ r ................................. $57.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICI!

Dally ....... ......... .... .... ........... 25 Ci'nls
Subscribers not dl'Sirlr.g 1o pay thf'c ar ·
rtcr ma y rt&gt;ml! In ad\'llnCf' direct to
Th~ Dall y Sentinel on a 3, li or 12 month
basts. Crt'dll will be iriV(III carrier each
monlh .
No subscriptions by man permitted In
towns whE"re horrw carrier service Is
available . tJ
•

13 Weeks.................................. $!Uti
26 Weeks .. .... ............................ 129.12
~2 W
eeks .................................. 158.24
Oololde Ohio
13 Week• ............... .. .... .... ......... 115.00
211 Wcd&lt;s ............. ..................... $31.20

Weeki .............. .. ..... ............. 159.110

I

•

Mo.:e choices for a better breakfast
Made-t«H&gt;rder breakfusts

Improved Breakfast Bar

• Steak and eggs
• Pancakes and sausage
• Eggs and bacon
• Whatever you want, however
you want it!

1

Steak finge!li

1

Boneless chicken fingen;

1

Cinnamon honey butter

• Peaches
• Hot apples
• Doughnuts
• A large variety of fresh fruit daily

· At this season of giving and I
r -----~~~~--------~----~

Inland Dally Prrss Association and the
Ohio N£'wspaper Assorlatlon. National

~2

I

Mrs. Burris Is the former Clara
Elias. Her husband has been a
barber In New Haven for the past 62
years.
The open house Is being hosted by
their son, Pete and his family. They
have three grandchUdren and one
great-granddaughter.

This is notice
to men waich removed .2= mo•
del ST 17 air spiders and 1-model C.H.P. 800
sandblast Pot on Dec. 1S from Water Tower
at 5 Points, Ohio, Chester, Tuppers Plains, Dis- .
trict Tank, you . do hereby have S working
days to return this equipment or make available for pickup or be prosecuted for theft. Signed, Manuel Gheen .

Guests at wedding from out of town

Mall Subac:rlptlons
lnskte Ohio

CLOSED T'ESDAY, DEC. 24 AT 2 P.M.
RE-OPEN FRIDAY, DEC. 27 AT 6 A.M.

Morning GRAND THEFT .

Sunday• School attendanre De· son, Dorotlly Calaway, and Dorothy
cember 8 was 27; church .attend· Robinson; song leaders, Thelma
ance, 30. On December 15 Sunday Henderson, Marilyn Robinson, and
· School attendance was 26; church Lloyd Dllllnger.
1
attendance, 22.
Young Adults class sponsored a
Sunday School elections for 1986 Christmas dinner alter church
were held December 8. Teac!-ers December 8. The class !Umlshed
and assistants are as follows: the ham, others brought covered
Sunbeams, Doris DUIInger and Lori dishes. A ro-more-than·flfty·cents
Ritchie; Primacy Class, Myrtle gift exchange was held.
Flanders and Sandra Wright; Busy
Bees; Charlotte Van Meter and
Rev. Don Arcber asked the
Marlene Donovan ; Willing blessing. Others present were
Workers, Gertrude Robinson and Russell an(l Eloise Archer, Lloyd,
Thelma Henderson; Young Adults, Ruth, Jim, and Debbie Brooks,
Dorothy Calaway, Florence ·Ann Richard and Florence Ann
Spencer, Lloyd Dillinger, Marilyn Spencer, Ronald, Todd. and Ttm
Robinson; Adult, Nellie Parker and
Marlene Flanders,
and . Michelle
Russell Archer. Other officers are · Flanders,
Donovan. Myrtle
Ma·
secretary ~surer, Kathy Watson rllyn .Robinson, Lori Ritchie, Jim,
and Tim Spencer; roll call, Lisa Sandra, and Joshua Wrtght, GeneBurke and Deianl Baker; Ubrar· vieve Guthrie, Hobart and Alma
tans, Bob, Jim, and Debbie Brooks, Swartz, LlOyd and Doris Dillinger,
Trlcia Burke, and Todd Flanders; Icy Taylor, Anna Thompson, all
ushers, Richard and Tim Spenrer; local; Ray and Kate Rodehaver,
flower committee, Thelma Render· Green Acres, Florida.

1 ...

-for fourth while Findlay• s Richard

n.

Col E&amp;Jtmoor Tl. Laocas1er tl4

.'

..

~~,

CENfa.u.STAT£ (t8) -CharIf! J ohMon.IH -13:
ROOen Watlact&gt;. 13-1·%'7: Cral. Durham. ~H2; Ed
I:Ndi('Y. ~: Eric G!llrm. 2-2-·6: Ed Slmpeon. '2-&lt;H.

Btdl')'l' Trail 50. Ca ldwPII

'•

RIO GRANDE (14) - Vl?'l"ldf. 3-9-1~: RlttlnJil'f'.
(1.0.0', Frt!Z , l ·:l·t Smith, &amp;10.26; Wolff'. 1·&amp;1J:
Colhard. 1.0.1; F\lm!Pr.l ·G-6; ~!1'1. BH. 'IUI'AI.8

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Denny Stolz, who Bowling Green
team climbed Into the national
ranklngs before a disastrous loss In
the California Bowl, won the vote of
his colleagues as Ohio Football
Coach of the Year.
The honor, voted each year by the
coaches, wU have to be given to
Stolz at San Diego State University
where he accepted a job on the eve
of the Falcon's appearance In the
post-season lx&gt;wl game.
The announcement of the
coaches' ,·ote carne Sunday In the
Columbus Dispatch which conducts
the annual poll.
Stolz, whose Mid-American Con·
terence champion Falcons were
11.{), received 11 first- place votes
and 42 poolnts in the balloting.
Ken Wable from Mount Union got
six first-place votes and 33 points to
finish second, while Jim Dennison
who coached Akron last season, got
three first-place votes and 16polnts

The offl'!lslve ortented game
continued In much the same fashion
during the second frame, untlljust
over a minute to go In the hal! when
Lancer Terry Deeter suffered a
knee dislocation.
After a short ·break In the action
Federal Hocking quickly gained
momentum and streaked to a six
point lead at the hal!, 35-29.
·
The trio ol Collins, Durst, and
Leachman sparked Eastern
throughout the second half, however; the Eagles, having a difficult
tlme on the boards, played In
spurts. Eastern, on several occasions, cut the lead to one. point, but
each time saw their lead diminish.
Mter cutting Into the Federal
Hocking lead, Eastern still tratled
53-46 after three frames.
Early In the fourth canto Federal
went ahead by as much as twelve
points, but Eastern's aggressive
style put FH In foul trouble,
allowing the hosts to narrow the
gap.
Ea·stern pulled within one at
58-57, but faded to seven points
before again cutting the lead to one
and forcing louts late In the game.
Three times In the final minute
Eastern fouled Tate, who made
three straight one-and-one situations good lor 6 points. Each time
Eastern made a successful break to
pull within one; one by Coillns and
another by Leachman.
With five seconds left, Tate put
the Lancers on top for good, 71·68.
Eastern hi12B of 54 and 9 o110 at the
line. FH hit 31 of 58 for 53 percent
and 12 of 19 at the line.
The winners had 34 relx&gt;unds, 18
turnovers, 8 steals. and 12 assists.
Gillian had 9 rebou nds, Barnhart 8,
and Kincaid 6. Leachman had 14
rebounds and Kevin Barber 7 of a
total 33.
Eastern had 10 turnovers, 9
steals, and ten assists .. Chapman
had four assists.
Eastern won the reserve contest
57·52. Mark Griffin had 12. Steve
Homer 12, Tony Hendrix 11, and
Michael Marlin 16. Penswlck had16
for Federal Hocking.
'

The Daily Sentin!!j- Page- 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, December 23, 1985

Wahama du

[: Southern defeats
~Highlanders,
7
4-36
.

~
BY SCO'IT WOLFE .
: RACINE -Dashlngtoa:al-5ftrst
fenxllead, the wxlefeated SouthTornadoes rocketed to a
·i:onvlnclng 74-36 SVAC victory over
PE Southwestern Highlanders here
'l&gt;aturday evening In lx&gt;ys' high
:school basketball action.
• For the third straight game,
;Southern placed at least 11 players
;In the scoring column. Southern
was led by Senior TOO! Adams and
))ave Amburgey with 12 each and
Jay Bostick with 10.
- - Benny Boyd led Southwestern
•with ten points.
• During the ftrst two minutes of
:the game Southwestern came as
,close as It wooid set to the
Tornadoes, however, that effort
'was short-Uved as Southern quickly
'picked up the pace enroute to a
· one-sided :al-5 lead.
By the second period Sluthem
Coach Howle Caldwell had already
,begun reaching twelve (iayers
,deep Into the Southern bench.
:SOuthern continued Its winning
tradition of keeping a fresh quintet
on the court In keeping pace wlthlts
torrtd brand of basketball.
' The rapid-fire tempo came to a
llalt In the second period as
~thwestem sought to slow the
:)lace, limiting the !XlWerful Toma.mes to just 12 second period points,
~the score at the half 32·11.
1 Southern l'l'galned Its momen•
tum In the second half as Todd
~ams, Dave Amburgey, and Jay
lla!Uck an took turns of a controlled
;running game. A great bench effort
-tornpltrnented the effort and coun:teracted Southwestern's ropes of a
· 'comeback bid.
• A1ter three periods SHS led 51·23,
•then rooved to a 74-36 finale.
! Southern Coach Howle Caldwell .
·Stated, "Tonight It was just another.

mber 23, 1985

.

,

thoughtfulness remember
wilh loving care and com·
passion all of the creatures
of lhe arimal kingdom who
. are so dependent at aH
· times on mariind for their

;i

well being.

Meigs County
Humane Socjety.

I
I
I
I

I,
1
1

I

L.............- ...........................-tal'

THE FOLLOWING MEIGS
COUNTY BANKS WILL
CLOSE AT 1:00 P.M.
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2'4th.
•BANK ONE
•FARMERS BANK
•HOME NATIONAL BANK
.•CENTRAL TRUST

1

Great new selections for a super salad
• Broccoli
•• Cauliflower
• Sprouts
• Nature mix
• \ttight W.Uchelli®

dressing

• Pineapple-walnut salad
• Pistachio salad
Plus all your favorites
• Three-bean and other
fresh homemade salads

• lWo hot homemade soups
• Ganlen frt:sh vegetables
• Fresh fruit
E?joy over

40 1ttW 1n all!

• Featuring lbmato Florentine Soup and our House: Ranch Dressing.

SH~~
Dinner Table.
'

•

�Paga 6-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Dticember 23. 1986

PQmliroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, December 23, 1986

Two cited
following
accidents

-.
:llarold
R. Walker
....

Ohio

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

By WILLIAM C. TR(JJ'I'
Uded Pre&amp;!i 1menat1ona1

''Twilight ZOne - The Movie."
.
Landis Is scheduled for trial In June and four
NOT A SWEDISH-ITALIAN MEATBALL:' Susan . production crew workers also face charges. In
addition to Edwards, whose case was declared a .
Lucci has dark hair, dark eyes, olive skin and an
Italian father but her part In the NBC movie "Mafia
mistrial last week because of a deadlocked jury,
Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio
Neal's resume Includes work as a Watergate
Princess" Is her first Italian role. "I'll never forget an
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
prosecutnr and successfully defending Elv!s Presaudition with Francis Ford Coppola for 'The
ley's
doctor
from
charges
of
prescribing
drugs
that
Godfather,"' she says. "I wasn't there long when he
REPAIR
. caused the singer's death.
said, 'You're not all Italian, are you?" '
Also Transmission
NEVADA WOMEN ARENT JOKES: Nevada
Lucci sald Coppola told her he knew sbe wasn't
Gov. Richard Bryan is mad at Johnny Carson ·
PH. 992·5682
full-blooded because, "You're too classy to be all
of
a
joke
about
Nevada
womanbood
and
because
Itall~." In "Mafia Princess," sbe portrays Annette
or 992-7121
wants an on- the-air apology from tbe "Tonight" show
Glancana, daughter of the late gangster Sam
'----~..-..;.3·'!4- lc
host. Last week Carson joked that tbe difference
Glancana. "It's men like Glancana that give millionS
between a parrot and a Nevada woman was that the
of decent Italian-Americans a bad Image," Lucci
bird could be taught to say "no."
says. "People forget all the doctors, lawyers and
IHE 'fUJILI
Bryan wrote a letter complaining the remark
other professional men and women who contribute to
PRINT SHOP
"perpetuates a myth, a stereotye tbat does not exist"
our Society."
FH
All"'t11 Ptiiii•JNIIh
Lucci says she. was a victim ot Mafia stereotyping and was just as bad as an ethnic joke. Carson ·
PLUS.
Offi&lt;t Supplia &amp;
spokesman Joe Bleeden said Carson was w t of town
while growing up on Long Island because of her
Fumituro,
Wedding
and probably won't see the letter untll next year.
name. "It was oo bad my motber used to send me to
and Graduation
"State jokes re~ll,y aren't ethnic," he said. "They
school saying, 'Remember, Susan, you are halfStationay, Magnolk
would apply to any two states or cities or even two
Swedish,"' she said.
Signs, Rubliw Stamps,
people standing on a street comer telling jokes. Those
Business forms,
LAWYER ON TilE MOVE: Attorney James Neal,
(opy Soni&lt;as, ltc.
.vho defended Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards In his · jokes are tunny." L:ast year Bryan was mad at
255 Mill St., Middllflorl
Colorado Gov. Richard Lamm, who had suggested
wcketeerlng and fraud trial, now wlll represent
104
MuiiN&lt;ry Av., Pomeroy
one
out
of
every
eight
women
under
451n
Las
Vegas
mOVIe director John Landis. The director is char~d
was a prostitute.
992·
In the deaths of VIc Morrow and two children In a
helicopter · accident while filming ·a scene for

a

Rd.;

Roger Hysell
Garage

B&amp;D

FILL THE

.

~Weather:----

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wrilt Dailly S.ntine1 Ctnsilld Dltfl.
Ill Co~trl St .. I'OIIIIfDJ . OM 457U

Extended Ohio Forecast

atlll

WEDNESDAY TIIROUGH FRIDAY:
Snow likely Christmas Day with lows zero to IOabove and highs In
· . the teens to lower 20s. Fair Thursday and a chance rJ snow Friday.
Lows 10 to 15 and highs 20 to 2!).

(Free Estimataa)
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
PROBATE COURT
.MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Eltato of Horry ·E.
Wyen. decael8d , Caee

No. 24,987 .
On Docomber 2, 1986,
in the Meigs County Pro-

State zone forecasts
South Central
Today: cloudy with a chance of rain developing this afternoon.
High In the mid 40s. Winds becoming soutllwesl10 to 15 mph.
.. Tonight: rain changing to snow. Low In the lower l:Js. Winds
becoming west 10 to 20 mph.
1\Jesday: cloudy with scattered flurries. Temperatures falling into
• the lower 20s by evening.
- . Chance of precipitation: 40 percent this afternoon, 80 percent
tonight and 50 percent 1\Jesday.
Northwest, West Central
Today: mostly cloudy with snow developing this afternoon: High
near 35. Winds becoming southwest 10 to Zl mph.
: Tonight: occasional snow. Low near 20. Winds becoming
ncirthwest 15 to 25 mph.
1\Jesday: mostly cloudy with scattered flurries. Temperatures
falling Into the lower teens by evening.
.
Chance of snow: 80 percent this afternoon, near IOOrx:rcenttonlght
' and 50 percent Tuesday.
'·
Central Lakeshore, Cenll'al Highland.
Today: cloudy with snow likely developing tllls afternoon. High In
the mid 30s. Winds becoming southwest 10 to 20 mph.
Tonight: a period of snow. Low In the lower :Ds. Winds becomlnii
northweSt 10 to 20 mph.
.
; · " Tuesday: occasional flurries and possibly 9:JUalls. Temperatures
falling Into tbe mid teens by evening.

•'

•
'

!

·. .;...--- One lotto winner·-----:CLEVELAND (UPI) - Ohio
LjJttery Commission officials have
found one ticket from Saturday's
ohio Lotto game that had the same
six numl)ers as drawn 1n the game.
/:Those numbers- 35, '!1,16, 38, 17
.Aftd 12 - meant a jackJXlt of
$1,474,9W tor that player - or 20
ahnual payments of $73,745.

..

'

I

Lottery officials said another 299
tickets had five of tbe numbers
which mean their holders get $876
while the ll,lm tickets that had four
of the six numbers will get $59.
Ohio Lottery officials say drawingS wUi be held dallY next week,
except Wednesday, which Is Christ-'

mas.

bllte Court

'
Public Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEASE COURT.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
RICHARD STEWART, Ef AL
PLAINTIFFS

vs

UNIVERSAL FUEL AND
CHEMICAL CORPORATION
DEFENDANT
NO. 86 CV 367
SERVICE BY PUBICATION
Ur-.ot Fuol end Cholritol

c..,..alioo '· whoto loot lonO'Ml

SPRITE
DIET SPRITE

99&lt;

._Y notified tho! k hU _ , nomod dorett. Po. 18121,11

112)9, 16, 23, 3tc

in··--..-

RICHARD STEWART, ot ol VI
fondlnt

UNIVERSAL RIEL AND
CHEMICAL CORPORATION. l - - - - - - - dllotldll\t.Thiioc11on ... _ ,
Public Notice
Jl~tiOd COM No. 85 r:ol 367 1-------end II pll1ding In 'tho Common
IN THE
Ptoao Court. Meigs Coonty, COMMON PLEAS COURT.
Ohio, Pomoroy, 01\lo !167&amp;9.
MEI!3S COUNTY, OHIO
Tho object of tho com- GEORGE LEMLEY.
plaint lttoocquirotitlotothe
PLAINTIFF
following detpibed root ooN0 .85 CV 339
VS .

THE HOCKING DOMESTIC
COAL COMPANY
DEFENDANT
SERVICE BY PUBICATION
lho Hocking DomHiic Coat
Company, Noloonvllta, Ohio II
......,Y nolif"" that H hoo been
namod defendant alagaiiC·

in

lion onthtod George Lemtoy,
plaintiff vo. The Hocking Domootlc Coat Company, delondon!. This oc:lion hao been
Ullgnod Cuo No. 85 rN 339

endispondinginthoConwnan
Plaoo Court, Molgo County,
tho lOUth by Iondo of Fnnk Ohio, 46789.
Lynch, being O!&gt;PIO•imetely
The object of tho com600 feet along the rivor ond plaint lito ocquifetltletothe

GOOD
THRU
DEC. 31

LITTLE DAN'S
EXXON POMEROY
992-9907

402 UST MAIN

200 feet wide and containing

following detcribed real ea~

3 ocros maro or tno. in. 100
acre lot No. 376.
Thio deed conveys tt.e
righto of Jon Mining Co. in tho
roodwoy talding fn&gt;m Silver
Run Aivor Llndlng to Sllte
Roull #7 &lt;Nor tho CloO Roilway trtlcts and k is under·
ltood thatthe land harolnconveyod ttas botween tho C&amp;O
ReHwoy's right of woy and tho
tow wotor moolo of tho Ohio
Rtvor.
Roy ond Goll Herrman·

tate by-order of tho Court. ·
Soid raot ntote bolng lit·
uotod In tho Townohlp of Sotlobury, County of Meigo ond
SllltO of Ohio. Boglnnlng In
the cantw of the public rood
leading ln&gt;m Middloport to
Oollipofio, Ohio, thonoe Nit
233 loot tho Nit lino of
Mlnarvo Hyoell's 2 33/ 100
ocre tot; Ilion co rorth 61 dog.
46 min. oolt 106 IHI to tho
rorthoolt comer of llid tot;
then.. Mot 233 loot to tho
center of the Public road lfld

tO

h•ve the right for ingrlll
and egreas over the raid 1nd nonhwnt comer of llkt lot:
l1nd herein conveyed to thence south 26 deg. 30

WINNERS OF OUR WEEKL't DRAWINIS
DECEMBER 1st
Kathryn Hart, Racine - Tanning Seuion - '35 Value
Traci Weese, Racine - '10 Gift Certificate
Donne Aleshire, Syracuse - $6 Gift Certiflcata
DECEMBER 7th
Susan Bauer, long Bottom - Cotogna
Nancy Thorne, Pomeroy - After Shave
DECEMBER 14th
Pearl Russell. Racine - $6 Gift Certificate
Mory Skinner, Middleport - Gift Certificate

7223

ALM
PROCESSING
C-41 .Process
t21KPOIURU

20

DPOIUR!a

36 EXPOSURES

$J79

OF THE
STAIRS
m w. ~.nd
HOURS: c:~•;;al.~i~~~!:

Embroider 15 old-time
cars In· easy stitches on
quilt of hexagons. Showplacer Pattern 7223 :
tissue transfer;2each of
15 cars, directions.
Send $3.00 plus 65c
postage, handling for
each pattern.
Sind II:
Allee lroeks Crlft! .. •
IlNder MaN " '• •

The Daily Sentinel
i12-12 NorthtrnBt.d., Woodslds.
NY 11377. Print Namt, Ad·
drill, Zip, l'ltltrn Numbtr.

364 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

786 N. SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

'85 Needlecraft Catalog ·
150 designs. $2 + 65C.
Books$2.50 + 6~p&amp;h .
133-Fnkloo Homo Oulttlog
126-Thrt1ty Cratty Ftowtra
1DI·Stw+KnN ITIIIutlncll
10:1·15 Oulb tw Ttdll

Allee Brooks
CRAFTS

I

Clerk

Said real oototo being
situated In Townthlp of Sot· b
C
I M·
d
~~~~:.Vol "t;:,~:,V 0 eogo on
Tho ourlaca land and river
tanding formetly known ao
the SIIYOf Run Coal Company
tanding ond desc:ribod os lotlowo: Bounded on tho ooot by
the low water maoto ot tho
Ohio River, on the rorth by
land of Roy and Goit Herr·
mann, on tho weot by tho eolt
tine of tho CloO Railway
companv'o riqht of way, on

'.

COKE

No.

Lena K. NeaHiroad ,

Public Notice

odd-lo. 826 Bn&gt;adwoy. For- tete by order of the court .

O+E:RIStf ME:MORI€5 Of-

C~ta

24,967, Noomi Wyon,
32086 Mlnorsvilto Rd.,
Roclno. OH. 46771 , woo
.,.,olntod Exocutrl• of
-the e1t0te of Horty E.
Wyatt, docoasod, lato of
32085 MlnoroviHo Rd.,
Raclno, Oh., 46771 .
Robert E. Buck,
Probeto Judgo
Motu• County, Ohio

the everybody gift••

CHRISTMAS

2 LITER

Contracting S.nlct

Pub lit: Notice

Meets Thursday
1\Jppers Plains Veterans of
Foreign Wars wUI meet Thursday,
7:30 p.m.. at tbe 1\Jpper Plains
Firehouse. Officers wUI be elected.

CIRCLE
CONTRACDNG
Complete lulldlntl

OPEN TONIGHT TILL 8 P.M.

The annual Christmas Eve candlelight serv1ce of Trinity Congregational Church in Pomeroy will be
held at 8 p.m. tomorrow night.
Plano and organ music will begin at
7:30.

PHONE 992-7075

We Wish All Our ,· ..-,·
Custq111ers AMerry ~·
Christmas and AHatn ·. I
New 1ear!
1

t

f

J..

II 29·85 I mo. p~.
.

1-3·tf&lt;

EUGENE LONG

.. -Y

THE TAXIDERMY ·SHOP

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

2 LOCA110NS

VINYL &amp; ALUMICUM
Complete Gutter Work

Complete Remodeling
Roofing of ott Typeo
Worked in home ar811
20 veers

'' Free Estimates''
UU COllECT:

108 Vine St.
New lima Rd.
Gallipolis
Rutland
446-9244
742-2225 or 742-2778
9:00 A.M. • 6:00 P.M. Monday·Saturday . . •

Have Your Trophy Mounted By A '
· Full Tii!MI Taxidermist
Compe~e

Ph. 16141143-5425

Quefltg, Not Ptlce

11·!2·2 mo.
'

LB.ERFELDS

Sen-ice planned

t

STREAK CAB co~
107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh. _ 1

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Servlee

,Setups and

Dee.

Judgment awarded

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
.. Dealer

Home

Underpinning.
"Spoclol Iotts for
Senior Cltham"
PHONE 16141 992-6100
12-!0-15 I mo.

.

.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

SHADE, OHIO
Anything that has to
do with a mobile
home. No job too small
or too &amp;ig. Wo ~a

·Happenings around . ~eigs County•••

~~a

~le

BOGGS

Repair Service

CLA~~IFIED AD~

•

Emergency squads
have busy weekend

usiness Services ·

..----People in the news----

systems.
She was a 54 year member of
;."'., ~
Morning
Ugh! Chapter ro, Order of
~; Jfilro~ R. Walker, · 65, Racine,
Eastern
Star.
at Warren; a fo1111er
~n service employe at the
Two area drivers were cited over
member
d.
Vienna
Senior Citizens;
~eld Department Store for a
tbe weekend by the GalHa-Melgs
a 41 year member of the Vienna
~ber !lf years, died Saturday
p&gt;St of the Siate Highway Palrol
•Qaht In the Intensive care unit ri tbe United Methodist Church and a
following separate . vehicle
charter member of the Women's
.Koi:IJer Medical Center.
accidents.
• &lt;;Mr. Walker was born May '!1, Society of Christian Service, Vienna
Troopers sald Dorothy T. Thomp~at Forest Run lnMelgs County, Methodist Church. Until recent
son, 45, of Rt. 1, Cheslllre, allegedly
years, she had been active In many
•t &lt;aon ot tile late Robert and Jennie other
pulled frolll Meigs County '15 onto
Vienna and Warren organiza~Walker. He wall a veteran of
soUthbound Ohio 7 and Into the path
, ~iirld· War II and a inember of tbe tions and activities.
of
southbound car driven by
In July , 1978, Mr. and Mrs.
:.niiclne AmeriCan Legion Post.
David M. Demosky, 22, of~
Survlvtng are his wife, Margaret Russell returned to Meigs County to
Bradoory
Middleport. De· :.c\lrtls' Walker, Racine; a son and make their home In Minersville
rnosky apparently could not stqJ
' daughter-In-law, Gary and Karen )'11th t.helr daughter and son-In-law,
and struck Thompson's vehicle In
Rae and Ronald E. Reynolds. At
~Walker, Racine; a daughter and
the right side.
son-In-law, Mary Ami and Roger that time she became a member d
No Injuries were reported In tbe
~ItS, Racine: a sister, Gladys the Minersville United Methodist
2:40 p.m. Sunday collision, which
"'Walktt!', Pomeroy; a brother, Church.
troopers . sald caused moderate
In addition to her daughter and
~Roger Walker, Pomeroy; two
damage to both vehicles. Thomp:i!randchlldren, Eric. Shoults and son-In-law, the Reynolds, suiv!vors
son was charged by the patrol with
",Jennifer Walker, tWo nephews and Include two grandsons and tbelr
!allure to yield.
;Jl niece. Besides his parents, he was wives, Lawrence Richard and
David A. Warth, 17, of mJ7
Connie Millard of Lexington, Ohio,
~ In death by a sister,
Rosehtll Rd., Pomeroy, was oouthand Mitchel Russell and Patricia ·
Maxine Leasure.
bound on Ohio 7, about thtee-tenths
' Services w1ll be held at 3 p.m. Millard of Wilmington; greatof a mlle south of Meigs County 26,
!.TueSday at tbe Ewing Funeral granddaughters, Kristle Nlchole
when he allegedly lost contrOl of his
Home with Rev. Roger Grace and Jennifer Lynn Millard, Lexingcar, went !tithe left side oftberoad
,officiating. Burial will.be 1n Green- ton; a sister, Mrs. Earl (Anna)
and struck a guardrail.
:Wood Cemetery. Friends may call Eichinger of Girard, Ohio, 10
Warth was not Injured In the 8:30
nieces, 10 nephews and four
;at tbe funeral home at anytime.
p.m. Saturday accident, which
cousins.
•
troopers said caused moderate
Besides her husband and parents,
I
damage to his car. Warth was cited
she was preceded In death by two·
by the patrol for failure to control.
!JesseR. Will
brothers, Dana and John HoudaNo serious lnjurtes were reported
••
shelt; thr€e sisters, Mrs. Theodore
In
a two-vehicle collision Saturday
; Jesse . R. Will, 75, Route 2. (Stella ) Grueser, Mrs. John (Cora)
morning at the.Intersection of Ohio
;Pomeroy, died early Sunday rmm- Hitchens and Mrs: E. R. (Lottie)
7
and U.S. l'i.
olng at the Pomeroy Health Care Yost, two nieces and four nephews.
Troopers said Campbell W.
~ter.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Kennedy,
47, of Ann Arbor, Mich.,
; Mr. Will was born 1n Meigs 1\Jesday al the Ewing Funeral
was eastbound on l'i, when his car
:County on·June 7, 1910, a s&lt;&gt;n ri tbe Home with Rev. Steve Nelsonoftbe
allegedly slid through a fiashlngred
:tate Seymour an4j ·Effie Radford Minersville Un !ted · Methodist
light at the lntersectk&gt;n onto 7 and
WUI. He. was a fa1111er and a state Church officiating. Acting as palstruck
a northbound pick-up oper• highway department employee be· lbearers and honorary pallbearers
ated
by
David M. Altizer, 60, of Rt.
SOMEl'IIING DIFFERENT - . MJ-, and Mrs. cactua 'rill paper ornaments and cbaiDs made by lhe
· lCore
his retirement.
I
.
.
will be her 10 surviving nepbews.
2, Patriot, which was stopped to
WUUam Thornton have a uulque Chrlslmas "lree." Dlomtoa grandchildren. Here Mrs. 'lbomiOn 'adds
·· -, mvlng are three sons, Law- Burial wUI be in Bradford Cemtery.
make a left tum onto 35.
the
flnlllllln«
touch,
a
star
on
top.
.
They've
decorated
their
seven-year-llld
51'!
foot
.. ·
· :Will, Pomeroy; Larcy WID,
Friends may call at the funeral ·
A passenger.Jp.o Kennedy's car,
_: .. ~-. h)Jur,'and Jerry Will, Co!um- home anytime a!ter 2 p.m. toojay
48-year-old
Sharon Kennedy, also ri
~ biis: twq.iJaughters, Phyllis Wlrrier, and untO time of services on
Ann
Arbor,
suffered minor Injuries
~olumbus, and Shirley Bulrum, 1\Jesljay.
In the 11: 40 a. D). accident, but was
.·tdlchtgan; two l)rothers. Alva Will,
.
.
not
treated, troopers said. Kennedy
:·.;t,:&gt;merQY. and Walter WUI , Califorwas
cited for'faUure to yield from a
.': ;~•. atid a siSter, Lena HeUman,
Meets
30
Edna
E.
Oller
Veterans
Memorial
stop
sign. .
·, ....~meroy.Jl~.3i!es his parents, he
Jackie D. Harrtson, 32, of Rt. 2,
1.-as pn&amp;;~'4)1 death bY thr€e
The Long Bottom Community Crown Oty, was westbound on
Edna E. Oller, 61, LOCkbourne,
Saturday Admissions--Freda
..Cis!ers. .·.:·.·,. &gt;~
....'· .•,'•·
......· ·
I .
Russell, Pomeroy; T~try Utile, AssoCiation meeting date which Gallla County 11, about four-tenths
. : Serv!Ce'Sr.m.~-held at 10:30a.m. former Meigs County rl&gt;slde(lt, died
A number Of calls were answefm
·;ruesday · at · tbe Ewing Funeral Saturday ev.enlng at Grant Hospital by local units over the weekend, the · Atllens; George Genllelmer, was scheduled for DeC. 25 has been of a mile west of Ohio 553, when
postponed to 7:30 p.tll. on Monday, troopers said he appil,ret)lly lost
·
Chester.
·
Hoine .with 'burial to be In ·the In-Columbus.
Meigs, County Emergency Medical .
Dec.
l), and wUI be preceded by a control of his pick-up, struck an
Discharged--Grace
Mrs.
Oller
was
born
March
31,
Holter,
Sa. . car)eton ·cemetery. Friends may
Services
reports.
p
otluck
dinner' at 6:l) ,p.m. 1n the embankment and overturned In the
'
muel.WIIIIams.
call at the funeral home from 6 to 9 1924 at Rutland, a daughter of the
.
Saturday
ca)ls
Included:
1\Jppers
corrununlty
building.
Ia ter Elmer and Lucy Freeman
Sunday Admissions--None.
roadway.
iiiis evening:'
. .
at
8:50a.
m
..
to
State
Route
.Plains
Napper.
··
681 ior Ira Brawley, to 'CamdenSu nddy Discharge-- Charles r;;~;~~~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;~~;;;;~;;~;;;;~~
Surviving are her husband, ThoAnthony.
. Clark Hospttal,,Parkersbu'!:; 10:05
mas: three sons, Char IE'S ·or Texas:
H. Russell
Earl of Ashville, and Leonard of a.m., Syracuse· to Township Road
'109 for Janice Lee, Injured In an
Lockbou!lle; three daughters, ~rs.
'
,. Freda Marie Houdashelt Russell , Margaret Cartt, Lockbourne; Mrs. auto accident, treated but not
87, State Route 124, Minersville, Sandra Gaffney. Columbus, and · transported; at 12:56 p.m., PomeDiamond Savings and Loan Co.,
!lied. Saturday afternoon ·at Vete- Mrs. Linda Riffle, Flat Rock; 18 roy took Terry Little from the
Pomeroy
Health
Care.
Center
to
Delphos, has bee~ awarded . a
r81\S Memorial Hospital following a gra ndchildren , four . great Veterans Memorial Hospital; deficiency judgment of $9436.42
ishbrt Illness.
'
grandchildren; a brother, Clarence
1\Jppers Plains at 8:45 p.m. took from Jean Burnside, Fort M)ier,
; Mrs: RusSell was born June 5, Napper, Racine.
Tercy D!!eter from Eastern High Fla., el a!, In a foreclosure action In
18!11 In Meigs Ccunty, daughter of
Besides her parents, she was
School to St. Joseph Hospital in Meigs County Common Pleas Court
i~ late Phlllp S. and Mary Davis
preceded In death by three sisters,
Parkersburg.
for property In Sut1on Township.
H6udashelt.
six brothers and a grandson.
On
Sunday.
the
Chester
Fire
On March 9, 1918, she was united
Robert C. and Etta Mae Hill,
Services wUI be held at 11 a.m.
· fll QWTiage to Guy R. Russell who 1\Jesday at the Wellman Funeral Department went to the Joe Gillan Racine, also defendants In the
pl'l't'eded her In deatll In 1984. In Home, 141 E. Main St., AshvUie, residence where a barn and a action, have been awarded a
FROM
1924, Mr. and Mrs. Russell moved to Ohio, wlt.h Rev. Richard Pressnell trailer were destroyed by fire; deficiency judgment of $1700.
Rutland
at
11:06
a.m.
went
to
a
Fa1111ers Bank and Savings Co.
Trumbull County, spending over 54 officiating. Burial wUI be in the
years In the Warren and VIenna, Fernwood' Cemetery near Lock- trailer fire at the Randy Searles has been awarded a judgment of
resident.
Ohio area. Mrs. Russell was a bourne. Friends may call at the
$24,743.64 from Harold P. Jones.
Pomeroy, In a foreclosure action
former teacher In both the Meigs funeral home from 5 to 8 p.m. this
for property 1n Columbia Township.
and Trumbull County school evening.
•

The Daily Sentinei...:P~e-7

'

min. Wilt 10&amp; feet to the
r,leCe of beginning, c;:ontainng 67/ 100 acrea more or

their farm property adjoin ·
tlng on the north .
Theprayerofaaidectionla

thottho above deocribod root less.
The pr1yer of uid ictiOn ia

eatete be awarded to the

plaintiffs. Richerd Stewart tho! tho obovodeocribod root
olid Betty Stewart, by order oltote bo owarded 10 tho
of the court and lor such plaintiff, Goorgo Lemley, by
other relief

11

JEFF CIRCU, SR.

to . en1wer the con'lplelnt
within twenty-eight dtlys tf·

The defendant It required
to answer the compllint

ter tho fait publicotlon at within •-nty-eight doyoolthls notice. whk:h wHI be tor tho fait publlcotion of
published onco aoch waok IIIIo notico, which wilt bo
tor abc conaecuttve weeke. publlthed one euh w•k for

tl!e tall publicotton witt be
modo on tho 27th doy of
Jonuary, 1988, ond tho
,_,ty-olght dllys .for on·

II• conoocutlva w•kl. tho

awer will commence on thlt

d1ya for enewer will com-

date.

mence on thlt d1tt.

•

In coM of the fltture of tho
-dint
-r
wlH ,_id .. required by
Ohio fl ... of Civil Prooodure
judgment wiM bo rendered
ogainot, K for IN rotiof domondod In tt.e COf1111alnt.
Larty E. Spencor
Cleric of
Courts
Molgs Countt
Common
,
liloos Court
1121 23. 30:
·
(1!8, 13, 20, 27 ltc

tO--,..

.

last pubicotlon witt bo modo
on tho 13th doy at Jonuory
198&amp;. ond the twenty·olght
In

caoo of tt.e fltture of tho

-.nt 10 - - , . . othor-

z (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601'

-

417 Second Avenue, Box
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Free Estimates

1213 ·
·
13 tin"

10-17 lin

.'

POMEROY,O •
992-2259
Nft USTING - Eastern
School Dls1ric:t - A larl!!l

modern nome ~ a goOO
n~borillod. Up ID iNe
bedrooms, lotatoo on approx.
I acre lot in the Riggs Crest
Subditisiln. Approx. 9 yea.s
okl with 2\! baths. $59,900.00

KOUNTRY

POIIEIOY - Cute lllme with
up to 3bedtooms.lleck area &amp;
other lealures. Priced to sell at
$19,900.00.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jo Hill 985-4466

wtoo Jllpot1d •• owqulred by
Ohio Rutoo of Civil Pmcadure
judgment wil bo rendered
againot k lor tho ..u.t demendod In the -taint.
Lorry E. ipencer
......
..ourtl
Molgo01 County
·
·
Common PIN1 Court
~·
·
1121 9. 1e. 23, 39: (1 1e. 13
ltc
JL......;....;:.;;.,;.:
- WlfAl2!210:!!!~!..-J

A m·

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

We Alto Carry
Supplies.
IUSINilS PHON!

(6141 992-6550

304-675

~~
. :J,

Golf
Equipmonl

:~l

Now. 0.., lns1allod. .• $2.S0 IlL
lal~ .... $6:00 Dw.

Oningo Golf

•New &amp; Prior Ownfld Clubl

•Custom Clubs
Youth Clubs
•Shoes •Troph ie's
•Rep1ir

.'

.

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS-.
Sizes Start From 12'xiG' ·
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36' · .
Insulated Dog House·s' ·

P&amp;S BUILDINGS·.

JOHN TUFOID

P~.

Chester, Ohio
12·11 ·1 mo

Ra cine. Oh.
614-843-5191 ,•.
10-6-tl c.

..

'

•
'

TOWN &amp; COUNIIY
VEniiNAIIAN
CUNIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM

CHRISTMAS TREES
&amp; PINE CONES
FOR WREATHS
AlSO

PRE-CUT TREES
AVAILABLE

PT. PLIASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson Ave.
SIIAU ANIMAL HOURS
Mon ••Wod.·Thun. 3·S pm
T.,.., 6:30-1: Fri. t·l prn
Soturdoy t0-11:30,..
L&amp;IGI &amp;IIIIAL I
SUIGIIY 1Y APPY.

PH. 304-675-2441
lEND AIEA CALL
lipley Office
For Hours
304-372-5709

10-14-ttc

Havo Your Wodol"'e,
Anninrsary or SpocJGI
Occasion on Yltfoo ...Wo
Tap• Ally Speciol Occosion.

HAILEY HANING
RESIDENa

Flatwoods Rd., Co. Rd 26
2 !ti. from fi¥1 Poinlo
Watch for

Si~s

11-26-1 mo.

R~~DIATOR

ERVICE

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

RENT A CAR...::.
CALL
446-4522

'•

"W• Rill Ftt L111 ''..

U-SA~E

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 #orth
Calll~olls,

•

hlo

7/ 11/tln

''•
•
•
•

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

DOZER, BACKHOE.
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER,
GAS 8o SEWER LINES,
REClAMATION, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp;DIRT

CHAaES lAlLEY

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992·7201

PH. 7U-2050

11-28·3 mo.

MILLER .
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

!CUT OUT FOR FUTURI USII

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195

8-B·IIc

985-3561
AII ·Mtku
•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges

•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezer•

PARTS and SERVICE

4·5 t!c

.

PIIICE RWUCED - Middleport - 2 story hoini on quiet
street,.3 bedroom~ garage &amp;
paoo area NiWI $16,000.00.

MIDDlEPORT - On 1 pel
streot - This 3 IEdroom two
story remodefed lllme is
priced to sell. It looks .n~ &amp;
has a woodbumer ilr cheap
heat th~ wilier. Oilner really
wants to sell. Make OOer
$23,900.00.

POINT PlEASANT, W. VA.
8 miles lrom

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

$12,500.00.

POMEROY - Realli n~ 2
story }'otrj! thaf is a real
bargail. Owner must sacrifice
&amp; has reduced · price to
$23,00!.00. Call now lor your
SOOwil&amp;

RT. U SOUTH

31 7 North Second
Middflporl, Ohio 45760

'

NI.W LISTING - Have you
be!n wanmg a campsle? This
41\ acres or lovely cleared land
wnh tall trees to shade yoo this
summer. Small stream with
12x20 cabin nestled alongside.
Water, electJt, llilet .facifities
oo sle. Would be bea'utilul
homesite also. Oiloo asking

KlUB .

PLUMBING &amp;
HEAliNG

IIIYIIt..nt
P!Oj)llly in Mitlcleport Two unn rullal · separate
utilities. live in one, rent
theother or reot both. Over
$900.00 monthly rental inoorre Want $24,900.00.

NEW USING - Pomtroy Stately OO!nl with river ~ew.
spend !he evenilgs on the
front porch 1e~xing as the river
goes by! fbme has lonnar
d~llg area, (amiy room, 4
bedrooms, 1\! baths, run
basemoot. &amp; a 2 car garage.
Storm dooJS and wndOw~
some insulation, forced air
natural gas furnace, &amp; wood
bumi'lg freplace contribute to
good healing costs. Want
$26.900.00.

THE

H

NPN usrniG -

Nft LISTING - Rtttlmd This home features a large
yard, new roof, and is priced ID
sell at $22,000 with f~anci'lg
at l1 %interest, $500 dJwn for
up to 30 years. Month~
payment as low as $204.75 on
balance of $21,500 .,or cash
pr~ of $19,800 v.ithyoorown
financn~ Ask for asl'owin&amp;

....

X

Ph. 985·4141

11-12·1 mo.

E . M•in

LISA M. KOCH, M.S. •

~ licensed Clinical Audiologist

Long'Bottom, Ohio

PH. 949-2649
608

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selec:tio''n' J'
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages ·; _

"zi

MARCUM
CONTRACnNG

' Long lattom, Ohio

I

WE

THE HAT RACK

GADAGE SERVICE
Rt. I, (ooi•Hio
915-4119

OPIH THURSDAY
IHI!U !UNDAT
IT

OR SMALL

115 111(1 ST.
POMEIIOY

CROCHETED
HATS

order of the Court and for

mey be jutt

end oquhoblo.
.,ch othor relief·•• may be
Tho delendont lo roqulrld jult ond oquhabta.

•Complete Remodeling
*Room Additions
•Roofing
Hid inc
•Gm4es &amp; Pole
Buildmcs

1( I

INSIDE YARD SALE

Down from Rutland Post
Office. will be runnl~ until
after Christmn ew &amp;
used tors. so ..thinlo for
tftt whole fatttilr. lis,
tools, novelties, etc.
ll-4-S5 I 010.

IN YOUR COLORS
Many Other Crafts
Available .

992-5738

12-5-1 mo.

TOOL .:::~.:· .
. \? '

l.t::' ~.'
-~-··'r ~"·
~ ·~ :

..

..

-'!f'.

'''

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•••
•

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

(

PH. 949·2801
or 949·2860

'••

.

'•

No Sunday Calls .

10-8-tlc

l/11/lfn

••
•
'
•

I

I'

YOUNG'S
MAKE If ARill.
USE WANJ ADS. : ~· AHANDY '.-.:::~·. · ,

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

••

•VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
0 BLOWN IN
INSULATION

-

GUN SHOOT

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Acldons 1nd remodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Concrete worll
Plumbing end electrical
work

ffree Eatlm1tesl

V. C YOUNG Ill
992·62 U or 992-7314
Pomtroy, Ohio
~

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Boshon Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M•
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotcuns Only
9- 30 -tf

WE ARE YOUR SALES
ANO SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA.
.
•SPHD QU EEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSO NREFRIGERATOR
•SATElLITE SALES &amp; SEAVtct :
We lim AFull Tltrta
Shot Teeh•lelu
,
u D1ty

•

.

RIDENOUR
"
TV &amp; APPliANCE :·

...

~

�Page- 8- The Daily SaOtinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

LAFF·A·DAY

· Public Notice

315 Lots &amp; Acreage

l

NOTICE OF

.
APPOIN'I:MENT OF
FIDUCIARY

Why PlY double prlct1' VIII! bulkl
biG 4 bdr. Early AmlricM Hofftll
*18,881. Now modal opan. Coli

814·1181-7311.

On O.:.mbw 10. 19811, in
1he . Mligo County Plobote ·
Cault. C.. No. 24.977. Ethel
Euler. 491188 S . R. 338.
~ .. Ohio 45771 , -.nted E - of tho
of Jomoo D. Euler,
cloc
I, 1111 \of 249 N.
Fourth, Middloport, Ohio
45780.
Rober! E. Buck.
,_
Proboto Judge

·

41

El..,., *321, ref. raq. Call
814·448·2181 .
Fumlshed hou11, 241 Jackson

Pike, Oalllpollo, Uoo woiOO
paid , 2 bolo. CoM448·441hflor
7PM.
.

(12) '16, 23. 30, Jtc

.. ,... ..·. ' .. .., ..,..,1/
..,.. ,,,
"Aw, c'mon over for some
eggnog, Ed... where's your
.,

64 Misc . Merchandise

Battery Sale

· ~·\- ·:

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay c11h for let• model ciMn

und cars.
Jim MW.k Chn .·Oidslnc:.
Bill 0-.e John10n

3 YEAR WARRANTY

814-448-:1872

WANTED TO BUV uoad wood.

$3995

coal ha"t••· SWAIN 'S FURNI, TUAE , 3rd . • Olive St. O.llipo·
tis. Call 614-448·3159 .

ONLY
All SIZES IN STOCK

TOP CASH paid tor '83 model

and newer used car~ . Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 batem
A'lle., Gallipolis. Ca!l-114-""6·

MGM Farm City
Service Station
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
6 A.ll. TO 11 P.ll.
PHONE 614-992-9932

Situations
Wanted

304-878·!1878 ... 878-8797.

Seal ndt window in pl11tlc.
Ptw.. t heat lon during the
coming winter. Bill Sid 114·

992·2289 .

Announcements

._.inning It 1:00 p.m. Factory
Choke 12 DUIOI ehotguns.
Special Notice. lingl11. meet
thtt tPec'-1 ptrtonl Cell or write
fOr •PPiicttion. Pertontl Toudt
lmroductJont. 304-744·448&amp;.
P. 0 . Bolt &amp;630, Chert..ton. W.

Va. 21302.
•

11

Help Wanted

1---------One certified Mldlctl Ttc:hnolo allt, wlttcdiYI - Send ,.,.,. or

Businaas
Opportunity

4334.

Giveaway

Coli 814·448-1149.

3 dogs · AKC R.g . Schntultr.

Coli 814-448-2831 .

Female puppiH to good home.

C.IIB14·448·8022.

Milt Cock ·a· poo to gN-• sway to
good home. Hat had llhott. I
months old . Ctll 814-192 -

7449.

Puppies. 6 weeks old . All m~n .
Cute. 304·675·3213 .
Color tefi vlsion . pieiure. no
mund. 304-676-1365.

I NOTICE I
Tl£ OHIO VALLEV PUBLISH·
lNG CO . NCOIMitnda that you
do buain•• with people you
know , and NOT to sand money
through thl mall until you have
lnvlltlglttd tha offering.

Lost end Found

J.:kton Pike, Gllllpollt, Oh

48831 .

FOUND 3 rm . old Be-cJI•
t.malt. Rodney araa. Call &amp;14-

448-2840.

LOST:ubls a. whitt m1le Collie .
On Lalley St. Mulberry Ave.
trH . Dr~gging chain . 814-992·
8811 aft. 4 p.m.
Will the pet'ton who mok my
Beegle dog ott hit ctllin in my
y1rd , Pllll rnum him? He ia 14
yura old ll'td Ia on mldlc1tion
for 1 haan ailment. No queatlon1
11kad . Bud McKinney, 85 South
Founh St., Mktdleport. Phona

814 ·882-3880.
Milling tromCampConley arn.
amall bltk end white part Spl·
nlel, hlltmell red collar, reward ,

304-876-1538.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

HOME OWNERS · Aifin~n~ to
low tilted rate. Uuequitytorany
purpoae. Loder Mortgage Co.,

814-882-3061 .

Oovemmt~nt

23

•

AHE . Coli 814-448-3388.

Jobt •11,040·

*89,230 yr. Now hlriftg. Call
808·887·8000 Ext . R·41182 for

Weter S.tety lnllructora tnd
Lifeguerdl er1 nMdtd for the
1981 swimming 1ea101n 1t the
Gallipolts .Community Pool.
lnttrMted ptnons. ~rtHitd or
uncertified, art urged to contact
the GelllpoUs "-crHtion De·
p.-tment. 518 S.COnd Aw ..

Profeasional
Services

178$ . elt1. 24 tor
dMCripdon .

P1n-limt. Mutt M 21 . Allahlfta
tnd w..erends. C:ountry C1ny
Out. 181 Upptr Rhttr Rd .,

Oalllpolio.

RIPI NMdld . For bulin111
accounta. Ful ·tlrM 180.000 to

•80.ooo. Part-time *12.ooo 10
*11,000. No ollling. Rapo11

busln111. Set your own hourt.
Training p-ovld .. . 1-812-938 ·
8870. Mon.-Fri. lAM to &amp;PM

CST.

•1...,. C.H 814-448-4382 .

No uperitnce·No uiH . O.t1i11
send ltlf·lddr.. ted 1t11'nped
envelope: ELAN VITAl-5847
3418 Enterpri.. Rd, Ft. Pltrca,
A. 31482.
'

bay AIHmbtv Worl l tsoo.oo
Plf 100.QuerentMd Payment.
No Exparitnct-No Stln. Ottah
tend atH·Iddraatad 1t1mpld
lnvelope: El1n Yhll · 715 3418
Emerpr.. l Rd , Ft. Pltrct. FL

33482.

Chrittltn pi.,o pi1yer tor " At·
flection• " Gospel Stnging Trio.
C1ll Evelyn Routh It 304-773-

5833 or 304-1182-2049 afltr

SEA VICE . Eatttt, f1rm. antique.
IIQ.ukltdon salts. Llclflted Ohio
lnd w..t Virtinll. 30"·773·

5788 .. 304-n3-8430.

Hom11 for Sale

By owner. Murt ttll-movld. 3
bdr. r~nch, ont cer g~rtgt,
welklng dttt•nCI from North
Gtlllt Htgh School . R.ctuctd to

U9.80D. Coil 814-388-8711 .

3 bclf. atory "h, fuM b•ument,
fu.l oil heat, flreptaca. lit tcre,
Centtnlrty, city wat•\ Call

814-448-3044.

t.troom houM for ull.
flrtpltct. 3 mi. south of GMIIpo·
111, 132,500. Call d•Y• 81 " ·
448-1116 or nights &amp;1•-•·te·

1244.

3 bdr.. 1 YJ bath, family rbom,
31/a mil• out St. Rt . 588 in
Green Townlhlp . CaliiS14-256·

8789 "' 814-288·8208.
Govwnmtnl Hon• from t 1
IU ·repllf). Al10 dtliQuent tlx

proporty. Call 805-887·8000

ht. GH-4112 for Information.
By owner. Rtmodllld 3 bed·
roomhouMonRt. 33. NIW F.A.
furn1ce, large lot. t23,000.

Colloct 814-423-8289.

By owner. Stitely, 3 bedroom
houM at 10 E. St. in PomlfOy. 5
wooded tcr•. family room,
dJn lng room, F.A. hHt, 2 bttha,
b...ment. garage. t27,000.

Why rent when you can own this
1 btdroomhouMin Pomeroy fat
15000 .00 Cllh. Call 114-992·
8871evu.

hkf•·

luckily . 814 · 884 -4781 .

12

Situation•
Wanted

Houra:12-9 p.m.
Plnepolt 1nd re ll log1. Forprlcea
or tor infcrmstton. nop by or Clll

814-167·8716, 8 10 6 Mondoy
thrv Fr!diY· Seturd1y 9 UJ 5 .

I.DCI1ad Twp. "d. 313 1Rice Run

Roedl Tupptrl P11lna.

V1c1ncy for the tkterty In our
torN. Treln td end flftttn ysar1
u pe rl tn ct . C1ll 11" · 992 ·
7314 . 1
Wll do houM cleenlng. Cell

814·1148·2881 .

ltendlng tlmbtr. htrdwood

a

olne. Richard Ballev-814-192·
3881.

t

814-387-7242.

One bdr. fumlthtd, g.;. fumece.
CA. Pltio with 8Wniloff ttrllt
pirt.klg, ateurlty I ht. nice
utt hiYI
locttlon In city.
mertncet • deposit Nquired.

Coli 814-448-411B.

14x70 tumithtd 3 bdr., 11},
b1th, 1250 mo., 841 3rd Ave ..
Glllipolill. Celll1. ·441-3793.
2 bdr. unfum . 12•10. wuhtr&amp;
dryer hookup. YJ mile put HMC
on At. 31. Calf 1514-441!1-4319
00

304-878-9780.

3 bedroom. tumilhed . Wnher.
dryer. IWning. 1200. plus depoth tnd U1HhiM. No pttl. Call

814-992-7479.

2 br tfltltt tor rwnt. You PlY
utMitlll. Dtpolft Required . Rtf·

....... 304-875-2138.
44

utllhlll

pd.

Furnlthed ap1 . 2 bdr .• 131 'h 4th,
Galllpol._, 11 &amp;IS w11er pelcl. Clll

448-4418 altar 7PM.

740Vt Second AVt. 3 bdr., •1 90
mo., dep . required . C1ll 114-

448·4222

btl-• 9 •

e.-.,IIL\1111.

8.

D1luxe 2 bdr. downtown, com·
pl1tt kitchen, til cerpM:. wllhlf,
dryer . .eJ.ctric hnt • AC. Dep.
requlr.. . Clll d-va 114-4484383, lVI. 6: weekends 814-

448·0139 .

Furnished tpt .. 4 rooms • bath,
no p1... ldulta. AwlltbleDec. 1.

Coli 814·44t· 1818.

64 Misc. MerchandiiiB 66
Snow thrower w-new motor Sa
blad.. *121, nM 1,000 BTU
AC •150, 8 ft. dlt bid trailer
w-fold down r~mpauttd for golf
Clrt, anow mobill or off ro.t
vehiclla t41SO . Call 1tter 7PM,

814·448-2745.
Mobllt home lot, 12'x50 ' or
I miller, *71 water paid, 4th &amp;

Fuel oil heater wltfl thermodat
171. Shower chair with whttlt
never ulld *20. Call 114-388-

Nail. Oalllpollo. Coil 448·4418

ther 8PM.

8824.

Mobile home lot In Rio Orlnde.

8 fl. truclc 1Dppor UO. Coil

Ohio. CoP 814-448·9882.

814-448·1214 tlllr 5PM.

G1rege tor rent , thy beck of
Tho1n11 Clothlera. Call 114·

Dairyc111tft. wtdtwtth remot•

noo. eon

814-245·

448·2419 .. t14-448-3849.

...,mp.,

COUNTRV MOBILE Horna Park,

Mixed herdwood tiD, t12. per
bundle. contaln.,g eppro•. 1 'A
ton. fob. Ohio P..let Co.. Pomt·
roy. Ohio . Phone 814 ·192·

8082.

Route 33, North of Pomeroy.

llrvoloto . Call 814-992-7479.
Tr1i11r tpiCfl .

Srnt~ll

chtldren

•ccept«&lt;. Out At. 1,

lo~d .

Rood, back ol K.K. 1-304-878·
1078.

8481 .

Wood. *40.00 1 ton. Accepting
hilt vouchtrt. 814·7•2·2464.

Solid maple E11ly Amerlcln
bedroom suite. 814-742·2185.
FirWfood, ell hardwood. 131 .
dallYtrOd or f25 .. you pick up.
HEAP ICC»ptld. CIIII14· 981S·

3887.

Olive St .• G1Uipolla. N.w 6 uald
wood·co1iatov1t, I pc wood LA
auit1 t399 ) bunk beds 1199,
1ntron recllnlt'l t99, new- •
ulld bedroom ault11, reng11,
wringer wtlhert, shots. New
llvingroom aultlt 1188· •599.
lamps. tlao buying coM woo~

a

a

ll&lt;lvoo. Coil 814·448-3159 .
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Sof11 and chlllra priced from
1281. to .ass. Tab ill, 110 end
up to •121. Hlde-a-btda.•3so.
tnd "' co uao .. 10t1
1145 . Recllntra, U25. to
1371.. Limp• from ua. to

bid'

U25 . pc. dinm• foom f108 ..
to435. 7pc. *188 and up. Wood
111111 Willi II• chalro *285 1D
*748. DMO *110 up to f225 .
Hutch11, •no. 8unOIIId compll'te whh manr111tt, U71 .
end up to 1381. Blby btda.
t1 10 . Mlltrtllll or box
IPrlnga, full or twin, t83 .. firm.
t73. ~nd t83 . Queen 11t1.
t22e . 4 dr . ch~ttl, t48. 1 dr.
ch11ta. t59 . Bed f11m11.
t20.tnd t2&amp; .. 10 gun . Glll
cabinltl, 1350 .
or ei.ctric
ren:g11 1375. Bilby m1ttr111t1,

a..

*25 • us. 1111 ~am.. no,
t21, • t30, king fr1me teo.

Good selection of bldrvom
tuitll, rocktra, metel ctbin.ta,
hlldboerdt 138 a up to tl5 .

Utld Furniture -· Dreuar, a bed.
mltl.l office deallt. 3 mll11 out
Bulavlllt Rd . Op1n 9am to 5pm,
Mon . thN S1t.

814·448-0322

Counrv Appliance, Ina. Good,
ulld appllancn 1nd TV lets.
0Pifl lAM to IPM. Mon thN

Sol. 814-448-1898, 827 3rd.

Valley Fumiture. n.w • UJICI .
Large .ecrion ot qu1llty furniture . 1218 Entern Ave .,

Oolllpollo.

E·Z Credit Mollohen Furniturs.
Rt. 7 North of Gslllpolia. C1ll

814·448· 7444 .

Retr~ator and lltctTk: ttove,

10lld

pine triple dreuer &amp;:

chool. Cal 1114-448·7827.

Country atyl1 otk fumllurt,
h'"d crtfttd and tinlah«&lt; , lft·
tique rtproductiona. Paul Con·
kll, Rt.7 , Tupptrl Plain•.

Antiques

Lump houn coal. llmenone.
gr~vll, unci dellverld , one ton
and up . Jim Llnler, 304·871·

73B7 or 878-1247.

GE •kf•by-alde double door
trott frN ..rrlgerltOr, white.

8300. E•c. Cond. 304·878·
7471.

Effencltncy ep1rtment . 2
roomt. bath. full biiMITitnt.
Fumlahed. In Pomeroy 1bovt

Krogoro. 814·882·8215 or814882-7314.
I room untumillhtd ept. Cell

7PM .

I.Ne Taddy leera: AKC Regis ·
ttred Chow Chow puppi1s.
Reedy for Chrlstmea. Cell 614 ·

288-1271 .

814-448-0708.

Hou11 cetl. lllff1' 61tolr.tt. Zinn

Cool Co . Cell814·448·1408.

bloodlinoe. Call 814-388 -8720 .

Jult ., time fOr Chriatmlll Reg .
Pit Bull puppiet, 5 wks. old,
ch~mpion bloodlin11, UOO . Call

810-258·1281 .

AKC Oerm1n Shephard pupplet,
7 WHka old, t7&amp; ea. C1ll

Ptcktna UMd Furniture half mile
outJtfridto Road. Optn'S:OO to
8:00 or by e-lnlmanl. Bad·
room auih. 1&amp;
of drtwert
and dretura aa10rtld 11111 end
stylet. Wlrdrobla. full ~nd twin
lizt bede. menr111 afld bo•
1priftg1. twin snd full lilt rail
I'NIY bids. cld1r chtttl, dtakl
wood end mltel, Uvtngroom
tultt, chlira. ooffH tlbl11. end
1111111, IMnPI. lorllt ~Inning
room tutti, dlnlltl Mtl. OAK
china clo . . t, rtfrlgerttor.
weaher 1nd dryer, Jtwlltry,
gi~IIWirt, am1ll tpplltncll,
ch•ldran doth11.

ch•

S u rplu a-Cerh1r1-Army -Denlm
clothing, (inaultted Oecron
covttallt c1mouflage, Oftnge,
brown 125.00). Sam Somt·
rville ' a , Ellt ·Rivlntwood ,
Junction lndependencs Rold·
O'd Rt. 21. Fri. Set, Sun,
1 :00-7 :00 PM (untiiXm11 1fter
8'00 PM op.,), FREE OELIV·

ERY, 304·878· 333f IKldo

C.moufllliJI).

2088.

QE Wllttlf and dryer , working ,

Fender precision b11a •326,
Fonder Bouman amp. 50
wat1 (1ubo type) great punch
lo good boll roaponoo $260.
15" J BL btoo speaker In
cullom bvuill ported cabinet
*121. Total oy11om price
1178. Call814-446·4062 .

FFill Su pp lii: o
1'. liVI'SIIic k
Farm. E,quipment

814-288·8451.

MIIMY Ftfgu.on, Newv Holl1nd,
Buth Hog Sallt • Service. Over
40 •ld tractor&amp; to ctlooat from
• co,.ltttlfte ot new uted
equipment. Largeai Mltetlon In

a

S.E. Olllo.

.

Grlvlty box, 1uger driven, grain
fetder 1276 ., bulh ,hog 1296.,
pOd holt digger 11,15 .• menure
c-rllder 1(50. C1H 1514-288·

8522.

Late Model 8N Ford triCtor. 4
lll)d, CrMm
not ut«t hard, 4
nM tir", 11895. CIIIIS14·286-

pu".

8822.

The S a l firm Equipment
Pre-Inventory Stle. 30 Fargunen. Good condition . t1795 .
Also goodulldflrm~u'P. Glvt
ua• ctll. We m1y hive whet you

ntad 814-843·81 86.

ttock. Htavy Bale Ftldtra.
Dec1mber S.le on Mttl fence
pott. 0 ft. poll t1 .12. Horn

Used photocopter, 11 61. 304-

&lt;rlall Rd. Open 5-8 P.M. Mon.
thur Fri. 81t. 1-5. C1ll 614-4110.

2311.

64

Hay

8t Grein

66 Building Supplies
Building Materl1l1
81odt. bride. aewer ~P•. win·
Clow-1, lintlll. etc. Cliudl Win·
ttrl. Rio Grandt, 0. Clll IU-

Top ·QUIIIty condhionad mixed
hay. t1 .30J.:r bllt. Call I14-

B49·3089 '" 8:00 p.m.

Good hty for Ale. 814-892-

5833.

Olt hty and tH1Ifeorcherdgr111

mlxad

hay. Coll814·887·8184.

., 4-441-2783.

Tfilll SJ)()fliillliil

llodt, brick. morur and mtaonry suppliel. Mountaln Stlte
Block, Rl . 33, Now Htv~n , W.

Va. 304-1182-2222 .

71

Autos/for Sale

Pets for Sale

AKC Reg. Botton Tenltr~ , 10
wkl. okt, wormed . lhota. Call

814·288·8384.

1973 VW Super. Beetle good
oond. C.ll IU: 441·302B .
1883 Plymouth Turlamo, 2.2. 5
Slid. '42,000 mlloo. Coli 814·

448·7414111H 4pm.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED' In·

Ntw 1 1nd 2 bedroom iumlahad
1pt1. 1ncl houM In Middleport.

Bedroom tulte 3 pc. white
provtncill with 1prtnga Only
t110, 1nflll'lt Olfllltl .11Hch.
Olrla clothN up to alit 3 like

includad . Must Sill. 304· n38873.

Ca11 814·182·1304 or 814448-1582.

Bmtn one b.droom mobile
home, very good cond, priced to

1 or 2 bedroom 1pt1. Nice
Melton of Middleport. 11 ea.per
month plus utiUtiH. CtH 114-

..11 ..1111 u .800.00. 304-8784184 .

882-71'17.

APARTMENTS. mobllo hom11.
33

Farm• for Sale

Apple Grove 100 " ' "· l1r11
blm 120d8, 1,300 ft frontage
on Jerry' • Run AoMt. 5 mil•
from Qoodyter Plent. Mlner1l
rlght1 . Want offer. Clyde Bowen.

Jr. 304-178·2338.

For ..,. or trlda, five

acre~

of

r. my· ltnd with water and electric.
homo . Coli 814-1182·2483.
price r•uciCI , 30'·1715·2441.

Will ctre for the tld.ty

I

tloutM. Pt. Plelatnund Galllpo-

llo. 814·448 -8221 .

2 br apartments In Hendwson.

304-878-1B72.

Nice 1 and 2 bf 1p1rtmentt
downtown. 304·8715-2218 ,

8·8
Middleport N. •th A-.-nut. 2
bedroom, fumithtd lptrtmtnt,

304-882·2888.

Ptymouth VtUtnt Sc1mp, V-8. 2
door, 311 motor. AC. Pl. redial

Firewood. tlerdwood , split,
ltiCkld and dellvartd. A very

-

· Coli 814·448·2840.

1,000 gel. Wlt.,tlftkwlthpu,.

AICC Austrelltn

f"'ppiol C Blue

Clnle Dog

H..,), 2 mtlll.
I fomale. Oood working blood
lines. Had flrat thota 1nd .
womlld . Coli Bhalllo 11 1-814892·1073.

II hoM uoo. Call 814-843- AKC Lh111 Apeo pupt, mal11
0081.
onty. 20 ahemplontln ptd'arll.
gando, '"'lot ond loving dogo.
18 Indo glrl'o blka w~h training 3114·871-8837 or 171-2223.
whH... 3 mo. ?old, 138 . C.ll

814·441· 1422 or 814·448·

1080 lfttr lpm.
CioN-Out Ammunition 81111
1300 box•
of Wlnd1etttr,
Remlngtom &amp; Flldtr1l ctrtrldOM
at prlcH 11 .00· 12 .00 . Below
K ~ Mart or HICks. All shotgun
slzii, IDmtPittO ... rlft~. lnclud ·
tng some rlrhl... All MW·
cuntnt mtnUfecture. Acroq

I

-----1111 Rnbler runt •150. Ctll
814·:187·0148 .

Home
Improvements

------------------- ~
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltionllllfetime guartn·
tee. locel references furnished .
Free 11tlmatn . C1ll collect
1-614-237·0488, day or night.
Rogers B•••ment
Waterproofing.
D.end M. Contr1cton. Vinyl
tiding, r~!actmtnt wlndowa.
insulating,"/ roofing. new end
remodeling. concrete. Call304·
J .and L. lnttlllltion. Roofing.
vinyl siding. storm doors ·and
windows. Free tltimatn. Cell

1180 Ch,.rolll ChiYIIIa, 4 do.,
*1 .800. C.H 814·448·8048.

R1t Ttrrltr Puppies, 304-1571·

1811 Datsun mexium ioldacl
wtth 111 the extre1, e cvl., tuel
' hjtcttd, extre c'-n . Call 114-

1808.

AKC Oarman 8hopll1td pupo, 3
ftmelll. Shott and wormed.

Mahan ollar. 304·481·1828.
2 mere oottt. Gentle broke to

· kldo. f7D. 304·871·2101.

4•8·1807.

1918 Pontiac CaiiUne, low
mH11. 'tuns good. mutt 1111 tor
~ri11mas U20. Ctn 81 " ·241·

1117.

18'17 Toyoll Collet OT. tully
loadad, I apd.. •noo. Coil
814-448·0021 .

saturday's

Pump ul11, Hrvica. Registered ·
In Ohio. All work gutrenteed. C1ll 304 ·273-2811 . R1vens- •
wood. w. V1.
RON ' S Te!1vlalon .Service .
Houn c1l11 on RCA , Quaz~r,
GE. Speclaling In Zenith . Cell

304-678-2388
2454.

00

1

614-448 ·

F111y ·Trtt Tr imming , stump
removal. Ce1130•·&amp;75-1331 .

••P•·

RINGLER 'S SERVICE.

rltnctd Clrptnftr, aleetrid an.
1n110n, pelnter, roofing Clnclud·
lng hot tar appiiCitlont 304·

875-2088 or 878-7388.

Sttrka Tree tnd lawn Service.
land~e~plng . 30f-678·201 0 .
Rotery or cllbl1 tool drilling.
Moat well a completed aameday.
Pump aaiH and atrvice. 304·

BB5-3802

Plumbing

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Cor. Four1h and Pina
Gallipolia. Ohio
Phone IU-448-3888 or 114·
441!1·-M77

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATINO.
814·387-0878 .

MV COUSIN CAlEB
GOT HISSELF AN
AUTOMATICAL

Good -1 hCivttlng. b11ementa,
fOOt lt'l. dtiVIWIYI. l ttptic tanks ,
llndecaplng. Ctll anyt ime 814·
4415-4137, J•mll L. Davison.
Jr. owner.

AIN'T
NOTHIN'TO
CROW ABOUT
THAT

COFFEE

I GOT ONE THAT MAKES IT: ..

POURS IT -- ADDS SUGAR. AN'
CREAM AN' FETCHES IT IN
ON A SASSER

MAKER

Do1er Work land clearing, ttndsceplng, etc. Free lllimttn . C. II

814·448-8038 or 814-992·

7119 enytime.

Genoral Hauling
/

, Jtmet Soya Water Stf\llce. Al so
pools tilled . C1ll 814-2 158-1141
or 814-4415 ·1175 or 11~ · 446 -

7911 .
. wIter Serv1C8. Wells,
w
Ken t

I AM1'HE

cllttrnl. pools filled . Phone

814-367·0823 or 814 -387-

7741 night at dey .

Weugh 'a W1ter Service. Well a,
cl1ttrns. pools. Faa1. reliable
strVic:a. C1ll 114·2 56 -1240 or
814-268 -1130 . Reuonab! e
rltll.
Would like t o htul grev el aan d
fill dir1, et c. C.tl arier 3'
1!114·4415 ·7·47
.

-

Dump truck aerv lee, will del iver
COli. Nmutone or other 304-

878·3180.
87

.

SEE TIIESE COLORING
BOOKS ?PAV

Upholstery
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

1183

Sec.

Ave.. G• lllpolls .

814·448-7833 or 814-44 8 ·
t833.
.
R &amp; M Fu rniture M1nufacturlng
St. Rt . 7, Crown City, Oh. C•li
614-256· 1470, c11t Eve, eu.
446 - 34 3 8 . Old &amp; new
Uphoattred.

I X)-[I]-( I I XI)

I Jumbles: JUICY MOUNT

(Answers tomorrow)

SUBURB CARPET

Anawer: What did they give Dracula when he fi rs t
went to Ho ll ywood?-" BIT" PARTS

BRIDGE

James Jacoby

fJ)Joffereona
7:06 (I) Rocl&lt;y Road
NORTH
I!-11-U
7:30 IJ &lt;Il (f) New Newlywed
+ J97
Game
·
• 72
(])PluM Don't Eet Dalelee
t K 10 8 7 3
!IJ NFL Fllmt
+AQJ
•By
James
Jacoby
Ill (I) Jeopordv
()) Nlghdy Buelno11 Report
EAST
WEST
(j) WhMI of Fortune
Henrik Wolny of Poland bela thl +K6 532
• Q 10
Ill~ Prloe Je Right
cards in a match against Swe• K Q 10 8 54
9
fJ) WKRP In Cincinnati
in the European Championships,
tJ
(HBO) Freggle Rock: Bella ·
at Salsomaggiore in Italy JasiJ +a 1 5 4
+ K 10 3 2
of Frout~lt Rook (CCI
~;~~io Although he had a hand of
SOUTH
(MAXI Crazy About tho .
strength, there was no safe
+A 8 4
Movleo: Grea1 Screen Mov- ·.
take over the one-heart bid
.A6 3
Ito
However, when his partner
.AQ 965
7:35 CIJ Sanford end San
the bidding with a takeout _
• 96
- 8:00 8 Cil CV TVo Bloopo,. ·
end Practical Joktt Doria
felt he could not play in a
Vulnerable: Both
below game, and nine tricks
Roberts end ken Kercheval
Dealer:
East
are thl• week'o precticol
looked easier than 11 ·
joke vlc11mo. (60 min.l
in
Firs\ he cue-bid;
South
Nortb Eaat
, wben North bid diamonds, he bid Weol
(]) Chrlotmae Fen1aay
Pass
!IJ NFL SuportUlrl
no-trump. Why didn't he just Pass
Pass
DbI.
(f) 01 1121 Hardculle end
to three no-trump immediately? Pass
Pass
3 NT
3t
cue-bid expressed some Pass
McCormick (CCI When
Pass Pass
Hordcaode and McCoruncertainty about no-trump and
mick's plane crasheo in tho
have persuaded North, with difOpening lead: • J
wilderness, thov mua1tace
from those we see here, to
in a suit contract.
• ___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ ...J
a group of vengeful mounlain men. (60 min.)
"'
ll) (I) 1m Scarecrow and
no-trump was not easy, but
Mre. King Amande'a a1Champion Woiny was
. He won the second East released a spade. Wolny read .
signmen11o toil 0 poeoible
and played five rounds of dia- • East's end position accurately. He ,
espionage agent blossom•
into a peroonol rolotion·
ending in his hand. Place your- ,cashed the spade ace and then exited ·
ship with th• suspect. (60
the East position. You have lour · with a small heart. East,could win two '
min .)
to make on the diamonds. It's more heart tricks lor a total of lour,
()) MocNoii-Lehrer Noweh·
to throw a heart and two clubs, 1but tHen he had to lead back into the
our
but what will be your fourth discard? ~mmy's A;Q ol clubs. Wolny had nine
~ver ~~nd~~~;;:. ~~~~
After some slight hesitation (called a ricks and a pickup for Poland in their
days, e young boy is taken
"flicker" by many expert players), atch against Sweden.
on a journey to a lontoay
worid. (2 h...) (RI.
fJ) PlaeM Dont Lot Mo Ole
(H80) MOVIE: 'The Boatonilly THOMAS JOSEPH
ene'
ACROSS
3 Latvian
(MAXI MOVIE: 'Chattlln·
oogo Choo Chao'
I Trlldlng
city
8:06 CII Perry Meton Spacial
post
4 First-down
8:30 !IJ NFL Monday Nigh!
5 Copter
yardage
M111ch-Up
blade
5 Weapon
1!11 Th"'l. Are Still Dying
10 Foreign
6 Yoko
· 9:00 BCil CV MOVIE:'Batween
12 Senseless
tho Dorkneaa and the
18 Eastwood 7 .Pungent
Down' (CCI
fllm
8 Fonnerly
(]) 700Cliib
U Spanish
9 Beatty
!ll Belko Skllle America lnqueen
In "Reds"
t.madonol: Men'a Compe16 French
11 MarriageYesterday's Answe r
tition Compa1i1ion lrom Sl. .
dance
able
Peul, MN. (80 min.)
17 Actor
14 Numerous Z6 Prior to 35 Indian city
(I) Ill ~ ABC'1 Monday
- O~son 18 Bum
28 Gus1atory 37 Entice
Night Football: Loa An·
18 Tendon
19 Languid
sense
38 Okla .
gala• Raldo,. at Loa An·
ZO TV's •All ZO Lardaceous SO South
city
@Ill Rome ICC)
In the -" 21 Winglike
Seas boat 39 O.T.
llJ (I) (j) Kate lo Allie
23 Alleviate
part
32 Catkin
prophei
When Kate it Invited to a
27
Forlorn
ZZ
Wk.
day
SS
Seaweed
41
Nancy"s
· ·gala bolle1 opening, Allie
Z8
"The
24
Brazilian
ex1lact
mate
buys her a very expenaive
Chase"
IJ'ee
34 Arb.
4Z Kind
dress-on one condition.
(1973 film)Z5 But
Indian
of muffm
Tonko -·- · --·
Z9
Chinese
fJ) MOVIE: 'Somtlhlng for
dynasty
Joey'
30Marchlng
8:30 Ill (f) (j) Ntwhort !CCI
event
Hoving been cheaiOd out
31 Primeval
of o pri10 by the Beove,.,
33 Surprise
Georg a decides to form hio
36 Extinct
own lodge.
bird
10:00 !ll NCAA Dlvlelon I Wom·
37 MGM's
en'e Volleyball Chomplonohlp Flnel Match coverage
lion
from Kalamazoo, MI. (gO
40 Prosper
min.)
(sl.)
ll) (f) ® Cegn1y • Lacey
43 Chef s garb
Cagney and Newman don
Unearthly
Santo Clouo anire 10 solve
45 Laughing
a series of dloeppeoring
46 Iranian's
stre81 muolclana. (80 min.l
ancestor
()) (I]) Trtature Hou- of
DOWN
8rltaln: Polecal of Reeeon
I Renown
end Dtllght (CC) Houghton
Z
"Good
Hall ond the Drumlanrig Earth"
Cos11o are villtod. (80 min.)
heroine
(HBOI MOVIE: 'OIIvel't
IJ·I I
Stor(
DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here'1 bow 10 work 11 :
(MAXI MOVIE: 'Ho1tY
10:0&amp; (I) MOVIE: 'The Gunfight
AXYDLBAAXR
01 Dodgo City'
,
isLONGFELLOW
10:30 (]) Caltbrl\}' Chait
11 :00 IJ (l) ffi IIJ (I) NIWO
(]) Man from U.N.C.LE
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
()) Mcloughlin Group
for the three L's X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
(j) Eyewltn- Newt
apostrophes, the iength and fonnatio~ of the words are all
(j]) Villnam: A Tolovlelon
hlnls. Each day the code letters are different.
Hialory (CC)
CRYPTOQUOTES
fJI Ban~ Hill Show
11 :30 8 Cil ll.J Beat of Caraon
12-23
Tonlght'o gueltl are Berry
-Minilow ~ nd Lyle .~lz~do.
H Z QA L S
BAH
: JZI
EI KH
PS
(80 min.) In 51orao In
Stereo.
PS
BA H
HZ
PSBZNS JZI
YF V
!ll Sj&gt;OrttCenter
8 (I) Remington Steel•
KHSDRSVK
Laure ond Remington poae
NSY S AL S. X F ES K
et o couple aboUI 10 diYeaterday'a CI')'IIIAiquote: OPINION HA~ &lt;'AlJSEil
vorce In an effort to learn.
MORE , TROUBLE IN THIS LfiTLE WORLfl TIIAN
who lo 1rylng to kill • dl·
vorcelowyor. (80 min.) (RI.
·PLAGUES OR EARTHQ UAK ES. - VO I.TAIR E
(I) Lltenlght Amorloe
(j) Taxi
1:00 (Ii Wendy and Me
Dtvld Leitormon fonlghl'o
One fllep Beyond
!IJ To Ba Announced
guaota
are
Harry
Dun
11:38 (HIOJMOVIE: 'Johnny DanIll 1121 NtWI
Stanton,
comedienn•
Mar~
@rGUtly' .ICC)
fJ) MOVIE: ' Breu Targer
gortt
Sml1h
and
Jock
11 :10 CIJ WOfld of ~udubor
1:10 (HBOI 111 8o Ton: R~'l
Hanna from the Columbus,
12:00 til Baot of Groucho
OH zoo. (80 min.) In Stereo.
Filng Hanky-penky on end :
I!) NfhFIImt
off tho fie ld co uld foul up
(]) Bill Coaby Show
(I)·~N!ll Outdoor Life Megezlne
t he divisio n p l&amp;yoffs .
(j) CINEMA: 'Viva Merlo'
(6J Archi e Bunkers Ploco
Hot1ed by William Conrad.
1:15
SOunemoke
•'
8 (f) MOVIE: 'Matilda'
1:30 &lt;Il Love That Bob
12:10 (MAXI MOVIE: 'ChooN M1'
~ ABC Nlwt Nlghtllno
1:40 (HBOJ MOYIE: 'Htartbrotk·
12:111 (I) En-lnmlllt Tonight ·
ABC New1 Nlghtllne
12:45
era' (CCI
. Volorlo Harper telkf obout
. 12:10
- Mtl¥tc
~.
(I) Nowa
1:46
her MW TV atrl'* 'Valerie'.
2:00 (]) 700 Club
- t o Town'
. 12:30
(I) (!) laUI NJtht with

.J.42

«

BARNEY

Excavating

B6

Now arrange the circled lethYS to
form lh e surprise answer, as aug·
gested by the above cartoon.

1Il

304-878-2295.

83

WHAT'$ A !IAJ.J..
HIT HIISH IN TM£ A I ~
DU"-INe A S.'IME
P'~A~I' AFiEit' I'AII!I&lt;'!'

- ~VJtrl

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLINO

AM·fM Cllllttt, drN tlc .•

" to . . Ul Is to lwe us".

wort or ride. 3 VMrt okf with 2
brldlet 1nd 1 IICid~ UIO 1
toom llua Fountain l'o1olol. 4,30 ·Ponygold;,g tyoanOicl, lad.ila.
1D 1'00 -~1'1'• Sol. • lun .. brldl11ndhollor. Vlf'I800dwllll

all day. t14·441·1822.

ttriptt, "'"' good, lookt good.

Call 814·448-4412 .
1878 Pinto auto, Pl. 8o.ooo
•-· 111100 C1 11 8t4 388
"'-·
·
•
•
8303'

-A(

11 · 1,

1.

'·
"

Caii814·448-I052 oflar 5PM.

lorga load, *35. Coli 814·"8- Dachohund f"'lltllot. Call 814· .rM, radlo. C.U14-245-8888.
71U 0&lt; 814-448·11138.
BB2-2302 "'" 3,00 p.m.
· 1178 ,ordTampo black wllll roct

bo

'

Rt. 1. Bolt 355, G•lllpolia. Call

Urga roUnd b1l11 or hey 120 ••·

1 or 2 bedroom 1pt1. Utilltl•
lncfuded. •210. plua dtpOiit.

1180 Llbeny 14•54. 2

Wanted lo buy 3 pc. rear apoiler
for ' 78 C1m1ro In PolntPie111nt ..

8t Heating

Oklo. HO. 304-578-2108.

1

m

Auto Parts

Ar11. Call 304·4118·1815.

tJJ

-

He who hesitates
gets nailed

8t Accessories

82

304-nl-5&amp;73.

unfumithed, vinyl underpenning

76

II

tFYLLATj
. J r tJ

our

John bott for ule. Call 814-

63

2 mere colt1. Gentle broke to
wort! or ride . 3 years old with 2
bridlt1 and 1 IIddie. t250 . 1
Pony Gllldlng 9 yeare old , saddle,
bridle endhttter. Very goad with

I [J

Ill ~ i)Jvorce Court

Boats and
Motors for Sale

878-8174.

Black powder •a.M. muzzle·
lo.:ling ICCIIIOrill lpiCltliat
Kolbtl'a Ouna a. Rtpalr, Mill:

-'1GIPNAY

(I]) MacNeil-Lehrer Nowah·

1978 760 Kaw111ki must ..u.
Sacrifice t 300. 30"-675-7479.

Rt. 35 , Southakle. Wtl .

Livestock

rx

1

(j) Eyewltneu Nowa

1982 Honda P. TC 110, ex. con d. '·
Coli 814·448 ·21 n .

76

h

I YOHBB
[J I -

()) SCTV Network

1881 Hond1 60 exprell 8150.

1982 CTil 0 Honda (Troll 901
1400. 1982 CB900C Hondo
•1.&lt;100. Coil 814-367·0482 .

Gat your ctrpet In lhip lhlpe
with C1p111n Steemer. furnltura
clllning-water dtmaga work,

Fold *148.80 "'" *7.85·100
lb. VAUGER FARM SUPPLY.

tOll' ordinary words.

her new TV 1eries 'Valerie'.

814·882-2772.

CR08S. SONS

U.S . 35 W•t. JtK:kaon , Ohio.

814-Bg2-8434 or 304·882 2518.
814-882-71'17.

. -,-

773-5131 .
61

Unscramble these four Jumbes,

aNewt
&lt;IJ oo m11 oo m~
(]) •1 00.000 Nome Thet
Tune
!ll Mazda Sponalook
(I) ~2-1 , Contact (CCI
I]J Eyawltnoaa News
(I]) Powerhouoe
fJI Difl'rent Strokea
CII Down to Earth
1J (I) CV NBC News
(]) Green Acres
!ll Aeroblct: Bodlooln Motion
(I) Ill 1121 ABC News
II (I) illl CBS News
(I) Doctor Who
(I]) Bodv Electric
GIToxl
CII Solo at Home ·
IJ &lt;Il PM Mogozlno
(]) Courtahip of Eddie's
Father
!ll SportaCenter
(I) En1artalnmen1 Tonight
Valerie Harper talks abou1

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD OAME
111 Henri Arnold and Boll Lee

one tetter to each square, to rorm

CV Ill (f) Wheel of Fortuna

B1

room, unfumilhtd, vinyl underpinning includld . Must Mil. C1ll

304-878·2338

Motorcycles

uoo.oo. 304-878·2181 .

1,00011-. olzoo12,13 , 14, 18, 66
11, 18 .1 . 8 mit• out At. 218.
Call 814·218·8281 .
Rodnay. Call Fioho" 814· 2488248.

Mu1ical
lnltruments

OATES 4 fl. to 18 fl. Ovtr300ln

Amlnda18 ft. traltfrMrlfrigtr·
ltor. 30" electric lllf·clean
flngl *350 . tiCh. 304·576 ·

74

..:·•:

Servic es

'rJ

picture. Mull 1111 *BOO. 304·
878-747B.

; 8:36
17:00

;~

1972 Ford v1n 8 cyl .. atandarct;•

814-388·8488.

IS' projtcto r
acr~~n. mlde by
Advent. E:lc. cond . Ptrfaet

Ctlllhtn' a Utld Tlrtlhop. Over

Chtlatmu Trtll . Rodney lktwtM Road . 11J• mll11 tram

W.O.

258-8417.

German wfrthelr po lnler pupa.
AKC, tllC. thow a. hunting

448·1200.

Gr~ndmu Ftowtr Ktntvclcy Lu~. Ohio Lump
Garden . 4pr"'ed beck chair~. 5 Ohto Stoker. Yard 01 dtllvlfl':
o6d collectors po'*etkntvu. Cell cement blodls 1nd bulkUng
814·MB·2101 aflor 8'00 p.m. matarlll . Gellipolll BkJdl Co.,
Pine St., Oalllpolla, Ohio C1ll

64 Misc . Merchandise

'

AKC R~ . LillO Apso puppiea.
ReedY in dme for Chrlttmll.
One m11t, two fem111. Call

Coal for aale. lump, noktr, .gg.
Pl~td up Of delivtr.:i . 8U·

2 okf qu lht.

Apt. for r.,t In Htndtraon, WV,
1125 mo . Calll1"·48-961!12.

Dr-s.onwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Hlm111yan. Pet'lisn and
Slam.. kiHens . AKC Chow
pupplet. Call 448 -38U after

l'lblut(ng, 111 typll of gurismith
work, ftn Hrvlct. 304-875-

245·8121 .

Call 814-448·8038.

9790.

67

4831 .

Pats for Sale

Brilrpltch Kennell All-breed
grooming. Adults a. puppl11.
Engllah Cocker Spaniels. 388 ·

TONY'S OUN REPAIRS, hoi dip

63

Nlc:e 2 bdr 1pt, 4 mil11 hom
Glllipolil. stove, refrig .. a Wltlf
furnished ., t200 mo. No Pt1a.

IUrtd , JIIIOnlblt rttll, Call

4

~;~;=~~~~~::~;~~~~~~;~1*360. Caii814-38B·9303.

4411 ther 7pm.

AVe. Gallipolis, OH .

Furnished 1pt. 920 4th Ave.,
G1lllpolhl, one bdr., UIO, U1ili t111 pekl. tdulta. C•ll448-4418
lhtr7PM.

1880 Uloarty 14•54, 2 bad·

Vans &amp;

1975 J11p CJ-6. Call614 · 44~ :

f125 . Call 448·

CrMI Moltl. 814·448-7398 .

Jr .. 304-878·2338.

Jurn .• w•lher, dryer. AC, undtr·
pfnnln; • porch. be. cond.,
Mtkt 1n Offer, C1ll, 814-218·
1121 or 1!11,·258·8315.

.

3175 .

Houulteaplng room, r1nge, ,._
frlg ., ahara bath, m1la prefmad.

Wlfhtrt. drylft. rtfrigeratort,
rlnQII . Skagga Appliances,
Upper River Rd . beside Ston1

Apartment
for Rent

R1 . 2, Alhton, Arrington Houu.
3 b.drvomt, 1'1:1 bath&amp;, rnodlt'n
illitchen. basement. 1 1cre plue,
pric«&lt;ln the 40's. Ctvdt Bowen,

1982 Clayton. 14X88, tully

304-4118-19 97.

llghlhouiiOtaplnt
Park
Central Hotel. Callroomo.
6 14-446·
0758.

4828 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Trucks for Sale

1972 GMC lr\lck V-8. PS. P8,'

For Nnt Slttplng Roome 1nd

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

room houH in town. nice llrga 15 room uptttira 1pt.,
loct1ion. forced 1ir turn~ . fumlahed khchtn. 1200 mo.
llf'll lot. t32.500. Owner tl- plua utlllllts, 238 ht. Avt . R•f.
n•nclng tvtllablt. ,304 -175- .&amp; dtp, no pttl. Call 1514-445 1080.

DISTRICT SALES REP. ntadad

luying Rew Fur. Self end Dear
altling-trapping •uppHe1.
Wh ... •nd nite 111M. George

or

e

LAVOFF8. Call 304-875·3880
•• 1-800-842-:1819.

Sf,ANDING TIMBER . AI C·23 .
, ......... Col: 814·742·2328 .

814-448·4283.
0221

31

5 room houM neer Pomeroy lor
1111 or rent. Calll14-982· 3175
for 1ppolntment.

by meotSouth'at•ro•t. f11t11t
grownin; tmmt manufacturer•.
9 Wanted To Buy
Must have 1 knowledga of
conltNctlon tnd J*!k'Gtd pa·
nlllltd houUig. Allo, finMclng
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLOS 1nd
mortgege banking preRJRNITUAE . hda. Iron, wood, f~rrld . Sind r•ume and phone:
c upbo11d1 , ch1ln , chettt , Kan Cocllarlltm. P .0 . Bo• 4808,
btlklta, dlahH. atone jll'a, en· M•rtlntvllle, V1. 24111.
dqu•. void and tUver. Write•
M.D. Miller, Rt .2, Pon.roy, Dairy Fermer, mutt enjoy work(IIIlo 41178B or ~ ·II 814-882· ing wtth Clttle end un electtic
7780.
milktr. l1l1rv, inturenc., plut
and utiNtiH furnlahld .
... ylng dolly eold. tll!or co.... tntll•
Inquire Pt. Pit. Job Sef\llct, 225
rings. jtwlfty. lttrling wart, old
ooln•. 111e currency. Top prl· Sixth Slf11L
c.a. Ed. urkett Barbtr Shop.
ACCOUNTANT' Part
2nd. Ave. Mkldleport, Oh. 114- STAFF
time ~nd 11110nal wort.. Btch•·
112·3478.
lor'• dtgr11 required . Aeply 10
Potnt Pleatant Register, boa

Wlltr pold. Coll814-245·5818.

12XIO 2 bdr, centrtl atr, new
ctrpet, Ch11hirt. CtU 814-317·

e..y A. .mbtv Worlt •eoo.oo
ptt 100. Outrlflteed peyment.
No Experience-No S1l... Otttlla
11nd tttf·tddr11Md atamp_.
envelope: El~n Vitll · 58•t7 ~11
Enterpriu Rd. Ft. Pierce. FL
33'82.

TEAM! Join the Arrrf( N1tional
Q~rd tnd you hiVe I good
plrt·tlmt ClrMr··good btnlfhl·
· monthly p1ycheck -- NO

Furniahed, AC. cable, no city
tllll, beautiful river view In
Ken1ug1 . F.ostera Mobne Home
Part. CIIIIS14-446-11S02.

3 bdr. mobile home for ren1. Ctll

Reol Esi,Jic

8:06
8:30

long wide bed. price t8&amp;0. C"ll '

Furnished Rooms

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 112

· --~---------------

878·!1800 "' 878·3124.

72

Upst11ra unturniah .. . 1pt.. clr·
petad, ell utilitia paid, no
chlklren, no pete . Cell 814-440·

- · *1B5.oo month ••oo.oo
dapooll, 304-875-1118

Nice 2 bdr. mobile home furn ..
convenient location on Rt. 7.

CoiJoct G14-423-828B.

ASK THE ARMY NATIONAL
OUAR 0 RECRUITER ABOUT
VACANCIES FOR QUALIFIEO
PRIOR MIUTARV SERVICE IN·
DIVIDUALS . Ptrt·llmtjobowllll
tull-tlmo blotll11. Call304-8783980 ... 1·800 -842·3819.

RadiCOfllad opt.. 2 bdr .. •110
10 UBO . Cti1304·675·8104 or
304-878·8388 00 304-8787898.

Two bedroom unfumiahtd whh ·
b. .ment. In H1ndereon. no

Call 814-448-8588. •

5 :00p.m.

WANTEO :Exptrlenctd Produce
mtn~gtt . No 1111 than 3 yttrt
expllt'ier1CI. Good PlY a.: benet·
Ita. Send raa~mt to Tha Dally
Senti'lll. 8.11. 72tt C.

city. 1duh1 only. Clll814-441-

0338.

untumilhad. 304-878-1388.

Plano tun~g lind rtplllr, tune up
fDr the holldey1. apecltl discount. Ward's Keybolfd, 30"·

4

SorNOn• to tlfl tor tidy in htr
home. Room &amp;: boerd. Small

Llrge hou11 end epartmtnt:,

2 bdr. fully furniahed . 1 2x86.
conv. loCitlon, Upper River Rd ..
Wlttr paid. sac:. dtp, NQuirid.

plo . 44G ·
dlteila ~nd job

BE A PART OF THE NEIOH·
80RS HELPINO NEIOHICRS

RICK P£ARSON AUCTIONEER

1880 XR 7 Cougar loodtid•. .

44,000 mll11. need• tome~·
t1 ,eoo or blat offar. C1n bt l
"'" 7 Woodmont, Point Plee;,unt. 304-87&amp;-&amp;347 .
-

eff. apt., centrel air 1nd IMllt In

61 Household Goods

AVON Sell Awn ..-, Chriltmtl
bih, lmit .. time ltlrt up ...

per 100. Gu~tanttecl PIYmtnt.

Oacar Is k&gt;st! wmvou pl1111 help
tMm get horne? Oacar is 1 bl.ck
m111 Belgian Stlepherd dog. h•
hn 1 lhlny black col1 with •
whi1abre111 and whh1p.ws. H•
illhort htlrtd. Oae~rlnlx .,.are
old . He h11 lost hit toller end
1.0 .. li you •e O•Cir, will you
piHte Cllll 814-448 -0636 or
814 ~ 251 · 88"4 7 Rewerd for his
r.tum . Olear'• home Is in the
Sowerdt Rldg• Rolld vlcini1y,
juat oft Sttte Route 553.

pm Mondev·frldl'/. Coli 814448·2741 ., 111vo m•aaee.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

22 Money to Loan

opply oo Madlcll Piau, 203

Euy Autmbly World 1800 .00

6

5 room houaa and beth In Recine
,,.., AvtllableJanulty4th. C.ll

875-3100 .. 875-5509.,

OolliooUo, OH 411831 ,

2 German Shepherd puppies.

949·2253.

Efficiency cottege. 1515 .00
week, utllhiH plkl. phone 304-

current federtllltt.

Uftion Tobecco WlrlhOUII, Un5o", Ohkt, wHI receive tobacco
l'lef'Ydly eiiiCIPt Chrlnm11. Firlt
ailfe, Jen. e. 1918. 513· 312·

4 bedrooma, wood burning
fireplace. No peta. C1ll 814-

3 bedroom, 2 ttory hou11 in
Pomeroy. Ohio. Depoth ,..
qulrecl. Phone 1·151,·753-3454
or 1 ·1!11 • · 7153·•858.

Er11p loy rnt: nl
Sr:r vrce s

Racine Gun Shoot ~10r.t by
RadneQ.., Club. Every Sunday,

W-W. C·C, f8500 . Call alter 5
p.m.. 304·875· 31 n .
·

46 Space for Rent

Wanted ta Buy: Standing timber
&amp;. pulp wood . Contact Atvln

21

448-0294.

98B·3849.

814·9D2·8888.

John10n 814-:te7-7410 .

SWEEPER and sewi'lg machine
~air , p1rt1. and supphl. Pick
yP and delivery, Davit Vac~A~m
Ciaaner, one hali mile up
Georg• Cnttk Rd . C.tt 814-

I room houM, open 11r1ge. In
Alffed Cumnwnity. Rlferenc.
1nd depo~~ requ ired . CIIIIS14-

8:00

Page--9

QiJ ~ ~~

EVENIN()

1982 Pontile Flrtblrd, k&gt;w ~
mllltge. excellent condition, i ir,
cond .. R·S, power brtkll. T-W.

________,..

Hou11 or 1pt. for rem. Fumlahed
or uniuml1hed. 114-992-2381
d1y1 Of 114-992-8723 IYH .

1 B Wanted to Do

. ••

46

Partially tumlehad . 814-9828215 .. 814-882-7314.

Will do blby alttlng in my home .

12/23/85

304-876·.8338.

3 bdr. houM fumiahed, 35 Vine
St. , ref. rtq. 1250 mo. C1H
114-448-.1214 or 114-441!1-

2282.

An nuu ncemen Is

~

12

81 CulliN . Cell 1fter &amp; P'fl&lt;

.,

73

r:=:==:=:;::;;:::::::r~==:::=====:1'"1 bedroom
Mtn . .vil'by the
Bulk
pt•nt.
hou•.
Total
electric.

UHGGGH ..•

#

1tl11JN1 OOlt

Television
View~ng

51~10.

1837. .

I~

12 VOll-6 VOLT

MENTS CEqu.l Houalng Opportunity) monthly rint ltlrta 1t
ttee tor 1 bedroom tnd 1204
for 2 bedroom, dapoett 1200,
IOCittd nur Spring Vallt¥ PIIU
and Foodlend. pool and Cable TV
IValllbla. office houra 11 pollible 10 em to4 pmand7 pm to9

TRACY
&amp;#.1 I HEAii:D :SH01S!
WHI'(I'IS GONS ON?

The Daily Sentinei-

.Ohio

Body Truck . C1ll 814 - 388 ~.

MOB. 1887 GMC

Rei. • dap oaqulrod. Coli 814·
448·1351.

0838.

Christmas spirit?"

AGRI BOSS

3

3 bdr., l-v1 khchen, ,.Ice utility
room, 1 ctr g1reg1. *295 mo.

,.

8248.

'

APART·

ESTAT~S

Autos for Sale t .

19n

Nicely furnflhld m0ble home,
R1nch ttvlt. nice 2 bdr. home, 2
full be1ht, 'IJti bl. from Wuh.

1

COMPLETE LINE OF
FARM AND AUTO
8ATTERIES

Houses for Rent

JACKSON

,.

7~

I

814·371·2288.

~Coull

c~

I(IT 'N' CARL YLI ®bJ Lany Wrl9hl

Apartment
for Rent

F1rm tor Ilia: no houN. 2 bamt,
county Wllttr • aeptlc tlnill. Call

Moiuo Counly, Ohio
E - of Jomoo D. Euler
..... 11, c.. No. 24,977 . .

-·• K. Neoaelroa1

44

December 23, 1985

Monday, December 23, 1985

·,

I DON'T ~AVE TIME. TO
COLOR E'/~R'f PICruRE
MVSELF, UNDERSTAND'?

a

a

-

I

-·'-'r.·.

.

I

(

2.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

This
....
MUZZLE LOADikG ..

aitd HUNTING SUPPLIES
HOURS:

Mon.

thru Fri.

· 7:30' a.m. fo ..S:OO p.m. ·
'
Saturday
.

Week's
Games
MEIGS
BOYS BASIETBAU
DAY 'TIL CHRISTMAS

Dec. 28-Athtns ....................... H....
Jan. 3-WeHston ..................... Away

Jan. 7-Federal-Hocking"""'" Away
GIRLS BASIETBAU

•

Jan. 4-Warren ....................... Away

Jan. 6-WtRston ...................... Horne
Jan. 9-Federai-Hocldng """""H01111
'.

(rJC111VIIIIj
'

:"Your Athletic
Sho• Headquarters"
•

I

~

'

Dtc. 28-lon Southlasttnt ... Away
Dec. 30-Ptbblts ......... At Chillicothe
Ja~. 3-Symmes VaHey-......... Away
GilLS IASICETIAil
Jan. 2-Symmes Va.yo. .......... HOIIII
Jan. 9-lastem ........................ HOIIII
Jan. 11-Galipolls..............._.. Homt

Dec. 27 -At Wahama Tournament
Eastem ws. Wirt
Dec. 28-Wahama T011rnament

I

Jan. _
3 -0alc HiH " .................... Away
GIRLS IASIInBAlL

''
I''

i:

••

l.... . . .. ..-·· .

INSURANCE
. NEEDS
DOWNING',.CHilDS
01111

MUllEN INSURANCE
113 SkOND AVE.
POMROY

CALl 992"3381 or
992-2342

EW·ING
:~. FUNE·RAL

'·

nco

BOYS SCHEDULE
Meigs
BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 22 - At Athena
Nov. 29-At Miller'
Dec. 3 - NELSONVILLE-YORK•
Dec. 8 - At Vinton County•
Dec. 10- At Trimble"
Dec. 13-BELPRE"
Dec. 17 - At Alexander"
Dec . 20 - WARREN"
Dec . 28 - ATHENS
Jan. 3 - At Wellaton•
Jan. 7 - At Fadiorat Hocking•
Jan. 10- MillER"
Jan. 14- At Nelsonville· York"
Jan. 17- VINTON COUNTY"
Jan. 2t - TRIMBLE" .
Jan. 24 - At Belpre•
Jan. 28 - ALEXANDER"
Jan. 31 - At Warren•
Feb. 7 - WELLSTON" '
Feb. 13- FEDERAL HOCKING'
' - TVC game•

Southern
BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 26 - EASTERN"
Nov. 29- GALLIPOLIS
Dec. 3 - At Kyger Creek"
Dec. 8 - OAK HILL"
Dec . 1 0 - At Nonh Gallia"
Dec. 13- At 'Hannan Trace•
Dec. 20- SOUTHWESTERN •

Dec. 30-Peeble•

(at Chillicothe)
Dec. 28-At Southeastern
Jan. 3-At Symmea Valley•
Jan . 4-At Wahama
Jan . 10-At Eaatern•
Jan . 14-Kygor Creek•
Jan. 17-At oak Hitl"
Jan. 24-NORTH GALLIA'
Jan. 26 - At Ravanawood
Ja. 2B - WAHAMA
Jan. 31 - HANNAN TRACE•
Feb. 7 - At Southweatern•
Feb. 14- SYMMES VALLEY"
•-SVAC gamea

Eastern
BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov . 26-At Southern"
Dec. 3-NORTH GALLIA"
Dec. 6-At Hannan Trace•
Dec. 10- Kyger Creek"
Dec. 1 3-South-tern•
Dec. 20- SYMMES VALLEY"
Dec. 21 - FEDERAL HOCKING
Dec. 27- At Wahama Tournament
Eastern VI . Wirt
Wahama w. Gilbert
Dec. 28- At Wahama Tournament .
Conaolation Game
Championship Game
Jan. 3- At Oak Hilt"
Jan . 10- SOUTHERN"
Jan. 14- At North Gatlia"
Jan. 17-HANNAN TRACE"
Jan. 21-PKBG. CATHOLIC
Jan. 24- At Kyger Creek"
Jan. 31-SOUTHWESTERN"
Feb. 4-At Federal Hocking
Feb. 7-At Symmes Valley•
Feb. 8-WAHAMA
Feb. 14- OAK Hill"
"- SVAC games

"DIGNITY AND
SERVICE ALWAYS"
'

lin H. Ewing:Director

PH. 992-2121
108 MUlBERRY ~VE.
POMEROY, OH.

'1

Pope begi,rts

tened because gas supply was inadequate ' to meet
production demands.
"I told the. PUCO that ll jobs were at stake as well
as a growing business and the potential for other
business development In the
The need was
urgent and the PUCO responded Immediately. The
Department of Development and the Department of
Natural Resources also got Involved in an effort to ' '
keep production going," Boster said.
Fedi!ral laws Impose costly obligations upqn gas
companies when they take on new Industrial .
customers. It usually takes several months for a
company to evaluate the potential connection and to
determine whether or not to accept the setvlce
responslblUty.
Within a week of Kennedy's call to Boster Kennedy
and TICO officials had reached an agreement .to
clarity llablUty upon the connection, Boster states.
PUCO chalnnan Thomas Chema personally
contacted Columbia of Ohio president Ron Tilley and
president Jack Dailey to solicit their
cooperation In speeding up the approval processes.
According to Boster's report, on Friday only a few
minutes before employees would have been told of
new layoffs word came that Columbia TransmiSsion 1
had agreed to the connection. By that afternoon, gas \
1
was flowing.

area.

nco

~ce

mission

VATICAN CITY (UPI) - ·An
l .vtth Iran !i1.J1ce the revolution that trip, "exclusively humanitarian In
envoy of Pope John Paul II today
\ 3rought Khomelnl to power in 1979. character, Is Intended to express
·John Paul has condemned the the vivid Interest of the Holy Father
began the first full day of a
Christmas mission to Iran, W!th :•.Nar repEatedly and this year In the painful conditions of the two
prayers and a message of solidarity
warned It was becoming " a way of peoples Involved In an old and
for Iraqi prisOners of war.
,, li~e" for both nations.
worn-rut conflict ."
Vatican spokesman Joaquin Na· I Elfhegaray L&lt;; expected to spend
Navarro Valls said the ~pe sen!
varro Valls said Iran's spiritual 1t;wo or three days in the Iranian the prelate "on a human!tal'!an
leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Kilo- .•• ;:apltal on his seqond visit to the mission to Iran to bring ujXln the
metnl, had proposed the mission by
Middle East for the pontiff this . occasion of Christmas, his message
French-born Cardinal Roger Et· ·. year.
.
ofprayerandofhumansolldarttyto
cliegaray. The prelate arrived
The Vatican spokesman said his the prisoners of war."
Monday at Tehran, the Iranian
capital, the official Islamic Republic News Agency !RNA said .
The Vatican has sent priests to
A travelers advisory today.
Iran to hold mass for Christians
Today
...cloudy with a chance of rain In the morning and smw
among the Iraqi prisoners every
likely in the afternoon. Snow accumulating about an Inch by late
Christmas since the start of the
afternoon. Temperatures falling to the mid lls by late afternoon .
bloody
year-old Iran-Iraq
West winds 10 to ll mph and gusty becoming northwest by late
oonfllct.
morning.
Etchegaray was 'believed io be
Tonight...cloudy with a chance of snow. Low near 10. Northwest
the
ot the
winds 10 to !l mph.
Holy
to
war
Christmas day ... cloudy with a chance of snow. High 10 to 15.
erupted 'in
has
maintained .
relations ·

l

!

Weather forecast

1\

,, HOME

The president and employes of the sC iplo Energy
Efficient Company In Mt&gt;lgs County hav~ good reason
to celebrate this ChriStmas knowing II) .etr jobs are
safe and that the young smelting t1ustness will
continue in the new year.
'
A gas supply problem which had sloWlj oj production
caused layoffs and threatened to caus.e additional
layoffs by Monday has been averted wd: h the help ri
state officials.
Bill Kennedy, company president, C0!1,tacted State
Represectutlve Jolynn Boster on Dec. 9~; h to request
her help In getting a reliable and adequnte supply of
gas for his company. Boster asked t~ Ohio Public
UtUities Commission to lntetvene with w lith Columhia
Gas of Ohio and Columbia Transmlsslor. Company of
Charleston, W.Va., known as TICO, In 01' der to enable
lines. Hennedy had
Kennedy to connect with
already requested a TlCO connection, ItNt had been
told there would be a three to six mont~ s walt before
he he could be served. Meanwhile, h' ooukl rot get
enough gas to process tile raw matery 11 on hand to
meet customers needs. Production 1 was slowed
almost to a standstill. HIS Innovative~ ~ mpany which
was started with a substantial , :federal loan
adminlstefed by the state and whicll, was recently
given an butstandlng achievement a~~ rd by the Ohio
Department of Devel:fent .: as
rlously threa·

i

.•

Jan. 13-North Galla ............. H01111

WE WILt
TAKE CARE OF
AtL ·voUR ,

Eastern

Meigs
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 21 - At Eastern
Nov. 30- MillER•
Dec . 5 - At Nelsonville· York'
Dec. 9 - VINTON COUNTY"
Dec . 12- TRIMBLE"
Dec . 18- ALEXANDER"
Jan . 4 - At Warren•
Jan. &amp;- WELLSTON"
Jan. 9 - FEDERAL HOCKING'
Jan. 1 1- At Miller•
Jan . 18-NELSONVILLE·YORK'
Jan . 1&amp;- EASTERN
Jan. 20- At Vinton County•
Jan. 23-At Trimble'
Jan. 27-BELPRP
Jan. 30-At Alexander•
Feb . 3- WARREN•
Feb . &amp;- WELLSTON•
Feb. tO-At Feder at Hacking
"-TVC games

Southern
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20- At Trimble Tournament
Waterford VI . Eastern
Southern w . Trimble
Nov. 23 - At Trimbla Tournament
Contolation game .
Charnpionahip game
Nov. 2&amp; - At Eaatern•
Dec. 2- KYGER CREEK'
Dec. 6- At Oak Hill•
Dec. 9 - NORTH GAlltA"
Dec. 12- HANNAN TRACE"
Dec. 19- At Southwestern•
Jan. 2 - SYMMES VALLEY"
. Jan. 9 -EASTERN•
Jan. 11 - GALLIPOLtS
Jan . 13 - At Kyger Creek•
Jan . 16 - 0AK HILL•
Jan . 21 - At Galllpolio•
Jan . 23 - At North Ga!lia
Jan. 30 - At Hannan Trace•
Feb. 3-At Symmes Valley•
Feb. &amp;-SOUTHWESTERN
"-SVAC tllmBI

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20.-At Trimble Tournament
Waterford va. Eaatern
Southern vs . Trimble
Nov. 21 - MEIGS
Nov. 23- At Trimble Tournament
Contolatlon game
Champieinthip game
Nov. 24-SOUTHERN•
Dec. 2-At North Gaflia•
Dec. 6-HANNAN TRACE•
Dec. 9-At Kyger Creek"
Dec. 12-SOUTHWESTERN•
Dec. 14-FEDERAL HOCKING
Dec. 19-At Symmes Valley•
Jan. 2-0AK HILL"
Jan. '9-At Southern•
Jan. 13-NORTH GALLtA•
Jan. 16-At Hannan Traca•
Jan. 18-At Meig1
Jan. 23-KYGER CREEK•
Jan. 30-At Southweatern•
Feb. 1-At Fede;al Hocking
Feb. 3-At Oak Hill'
Feb. &amp;-SYMMES VLALEY~
· - SVAC gomos
'

s.

l

STOCKINGS WERE HUNG - Jidde Bud!,
foltl'year old daupler d Meigs Prob&amp;te andJuvenle
Court Judge and Mrs. &amp;bert Buck of Pomeroy,

FOR

HOME PEOPLE"
•

MEMBER FDIC

"

SYRACUSE ,OfFICE
992-6333
RACINE OFFICE
949-2210

.......

.

~
__, . ' ,..
chediB to make
lhll'tbe ltoddnp are •
by
tbe chimney wMh c,are ulhe teUreouiy lo..ule cllwn
for that long nlsf&amp; before Chrlllmu wd.

-re

.

Steel industry demise
blamed on ex-govemor
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP!) Gov. Richard Celeste says his
predecessor Is to blame for the
demise of the steel Industry in the
Mahoning Valley, because there
were no efforts made during his
administration to modernize the
industry's steelmaking facilities.
. In an Interview with The Young·
stown VIndicator, Celeste blasted
James Rhodes, who is running for
the Republican nomination for
governor, for falling to deal with the
valley 's economic problems .
Celeste said thai the Rhodes
administration Is to blame for the
steel mills closing because It fa iled
10 develop a strategy for moderniz·
l~g plants. .
"Where was Jim Rhodes when
the decision was made on the
merger of Youngstown Steel &amp;
Tube and the Lykes Corp.?"
q~estioned Celeste. "Where was the
administration when that was
happening and the local communi·
ties were fighting it.?"
Celeste said the Rhodes admlniS·
tratlon did nothing to prevent the
Ujkovers which "sucked the profits
out of the good mllls"ln the valley."
·,

ll~agan

'HOME BANK

'

ent1ne

•
C OSIDg

EASTERN
80YS BASKETBAll
Jan. 2-0ak HiU -···············.. ~···Home
Jan. 9-Southt,. .................... Away

a1 y

e

SOUTHERN
BOYS IASIETIAil

•

The governor said the lack of a
clear-cut rnodernJzaUon program
not only affected steel but also other
industries In the valley and through·
out the state.
"(Youngstown) Is the metaphor
of the faUure of reinvestment In the
state's industrial base," he said.
Celeste said his administration
has attempted to reverse the
economic stagnation In the Young·
stown area by developing a stra·
tegy 1'/111, among other things , is
aimed at helping basic tnrustries
moderniZe.
The governor pointed to ex pan·
sion taking place at General Motors
Corp.'s Lordstown assembly plant
and at the automaker's Packard
Electric Division In WaiTen as ex·
amples of the strategy working In
the valley.
And statewide, he said there are
~(XX) more people working than
when he tookoatcethreeyearsago.
"There's no question that the
chief campaign Lssue Is the st3te of
the economy and oow far we've
come," said Celeste. "Ohioans need
to know they've grown t~ fobs
· themselves."
Celeste also blasted the Reagan

administration for falling to develop a coherent trade policy,
saying that the cu!Tellt policies
have adversely affected U.S.
Industries.
The Youngstown newspaper
ooted that the recently announced
decision by L1V Steel Corp. to shut
down a portion of Its Youngstowrt
operation 1s directly related to the
60 percent penetration of the U.S.
tubeless steel market by foreign
manufacturers.
As to Rhodes' charge that the
high cost of doing business In Ohio,
because of such factors as workers
compensation, has hurt the effort to
attract new companies, the govl'r·
nor· pointed out that IllinoiS has
higher workers compensation rat~
than Ohio.
"Our workers compensation rate
Is 40 percent lower than Illinois,",
said Celeste. "Yet Mltsubtshi Corp;
chose Illinois for Its automobU~
plant."
The governor admitted that tM
state L• stlll going through "!X"~
dJUlcult economic times and that
"we have to swim against the tide
when we're talldng about recov.;

a

ery: •

·-,

says biD to help farmers

WASHINGTON (.UPI) - Pres!· law, but goverllJlll'!ll economists
have made a greater Impression on
dent Reagan signed a $169.3 billion ·· estimate total costs, when food
me t~ past few years than the:
five-year farm bill he says will help stamps and other proviSions are
problems oft~ farmer."
'u.s. farmers regain a competitive tabulated. at $110 billion over thl'l'e
Reagan said he dislikes the:
edge abroad, but officials con~ years and $169.3 bUUon over five
mandated eKport subsidy, dairy:
that figure co~ld be cut under the years .
and sugar Import provisions o,f the:
Those figures probably will be
new deficit reduction law.
new law and predicted an effort'
trtmmed, however, under the new " next year to reviSe them . Block said:
Reagan signed the farm bill and a
Gramm·Rudman deficit-cutting
officials are evaluating whether to:
companion Farm Credit System
law. Agriculture Secretary John
seek legislative adj ustments next:
measure Monday with a warning to
Block said officials are "stlll y~ar.
foreign agriCUltural producers that
analyzing what Gramm·Rudman Is
Block, at a news conference, said
the , farm law wlll "help put .going to do In reducing expend!·
he hopes lowering prices ill U.s.:
f\merlca' s farmers back In a
lures in agriculture."
commodities will Increase foreign:
competitive position ln world
Four years ago, administration
sales and lay the groundwork .f or
qwrkets.''
offtclais estimated commodity por·
restoring the U.S. farm economy,.
American taxpayers wUI hank·
tlons c1 the 1981 farm b!JI would cost
burdened by low farm lnoome,land'
roll lower, more competitive prtce
$11 billion, but theycostarecord$63 values that. have fallen more than
supports for grain and cotton.
blllion, as farm exp:&gt;rts and market
percent In the worst·hll states, high;
Reagan said, "I believe more prtces tumbled, activating subs!·
Interest rates and a 29 percent:
progess could have been made In dies officials had believed would not
decline In farm exports over the'
keepJng down costs," but praised have to be paid,
past four years.
·• : :
Gongress for making a "good faith
After signing the farm bill and t~
As to the short term, he said: ': j\:
effort In this regard."
Farm Credit System measure,
perfect farm bill, whatever that:
Farm Income support programs Reagan accompanied Block to a
may be, Is not going to rell~ t1le"
are expected ~cost $52 billion for
satelllte teleconference to enswer
stress. It's qot go.ftg 19 ~..@II eairt,:
the first three years of the five-year &lt;westlons. ~ sald, "Few things
winter."
,,,.... 1'

00:

THE SEASON FOR SHARING
made a111We brltJIW for 111M)'
..... to liard ""' ...

Anny. EIU!e· AduJw, •r~ullar, Shirley Jo ~lor
wMh lfOOerlellD 111'1111, UldSil Dora Wlnl!gprepare
lor the .-..lllotl !IIIII 1(11 11\:-ay. .

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="219">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2809">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="41797">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="41796">
              <text>December 23, 1985</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1157">
      <name>houdashelt</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1477">
      <name>napper</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7154">
      <name>oller</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="275">
      <name>russell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="91">
      <name>walker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="716">
      <name>will</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
