<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13345" 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/13345?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-02T17:01:04+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44317">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/d475ea85266dacc1e28948af8f32afaa.pdf</src>
      <authentication>30471099b8901625fe932f4b6a8239a9</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="41810">
                  <text>',
.•

~ Page-D-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

December 29, 1985

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

. .,....,break-up

rtdead
~~!,!e~~ ~~~ . ~!"eric~~-a.!!!~"J!.~~.-

• least three Americans- died when
: suspected Arab terrortsts stonned
$ El AI alrUne ticket , counters at
; airports at Rome, Italy and Vienna,
i AAustria firing automatic rifles
f and throwing hand grenades. Some
1122 people were Injured.
r Eleanor Kawala of San Fran~ cl.sco, who stood about IO feet from
: the ticket counter at Rome's
LeonardoDaVInciatrportwhenthe
; shooting started Friday morning,
~. arrived at Nf'W York's Kennedy
.:-Airport late Friday. "Everybody
:.was hysterical, screaming, looking
::for their families," she told
· reporters.
:- "You saw everybody dive. First I
: thOught It was firecrackers," Ka·.wala said.
:: Anthony Santy, a native of
:.Connecticut who lives In Naples,
::Italy was returning to New York for
·:his father's funeral when the
. :·terrortsts made their move. He said
·: he heard $hauls In English of, "Kill
_· :'them all," and then saw two
· .•·terrortsts.
~ "They were carrying out a
:,mas~cre.." survivor Anlello Gua·::rlnosaldofthefourmenwhotossed ·
&lt;hand grenades and then sprayed
:the tennlnal with
using

malic rifles at 9:15 a.m.
At least 14 people - Jncludlng at
least three Americans -died and
74 were wounded at Da VInci.
Among the dead were three
gunmen and three Americans,
Identified as John Buonocore, 20,
Don Maland, 30, and Natasha
Slmpoon, ll. daughter of VIctor
Simpson, an Associated Press
correspondent In Rome.
Simpson was standing next to her
father at the 'IWA ticket counter
preparing to board a flight for the
United States and a month-long
vacation.
Italian officials Identified Buonocore as a U.S. serviceman, but the
Pentagon dented the report. Maland, whose hOmetown Is not
known, died late Friday of head
wounds suffered In the attack.
Another victim was found next to ·
a suitcase that contained a U.S .
passport. The man was believed to
be Frederick Gage Jr.. 29, of
Madison, Wis., who had been
traveling In Italy with his uncle, the
publisher of the Capital Times of
Madison, a spokesman for the
newspaper said. ·
One of the gunmen was wounded
by Israeli and Italian securily

SPONSORED BY RUTLAND LIONS CLUB

DECEMBER 31-9 P.M.·l A.M.

t1 5 COUPLE

$7 50 SINGLE

FREE SNACKS &amp; PARTY FLAVORS

MUSIC BY MUSIC UNLIMITED
CAU 742-2370 OR SEE ANY UONS MEMBER
AT THE

In an evld'ently related attack 25 · counter, then C4)elled !Ire with their
minutes iater than the ooein Rome, automatic weapons.
three gurunen opmed fire with
"It was an Inferno," said Dora
Kalashnlkov rilles and threw gre- Silvestri, who was wounded as she
nades at El AI passen&amp;ers at waited In Une at·the adlacent 1WA
Vienna's Schwechat Airport. At counter. "We all threw ournelves to
least three people,· Including one the grbund and blood spread all
terrortst, died and at least n were over the floor. !feU m thebodyofa
Injured In that attack.
girl and a grenadespllnterhltnieln
Pollee In both cities said aU the the lace."
terrorists were either killed or
Amongthedeadweretwowomen
arrested.
and a baby who died shortly after
The attack In Rome came in an reaching San 1\gostlno hspltal at
area filled with passengers prepar- Ostia, near the airport, pollee said.
lngtohoard afllghttoisraei.Pollce
"I thoughtlt was a sick joke,"
said gunmen threw three

Clarinette0 -116 by Realistic

1·995

Special
Purchase ·

Save

•so

It's almost Impossible to make dialing errors! White wlblue accents,
beige wlbrown or beige w/orange.
H43-90219031904. FCC regloterod.

eo4 Below lltr'a SUaaetted
Rtlall Price of $41:95

· 3-Way Speaker

NO\•a'"•W by Realistic

40o/o
Off

1495

ANNUAL JANUARY

SUPER SALE
ALL BOOKS
DISCOUNTED

•eo

3995

119t~
Reg.199.95

#40-2048

Bantrill, additional

Save

'40475
5

3RD &amp; ITH STREET
HUNnNGTON, W. VA.

lcro11 from Knwrt

"Across from the Civi( Center"

1
Reg.129.95

Auto-reverse plays other tape
side automatically. OIN-C stze fits
in-dash of most cars. AM/FM. 24
watts. tl2·t917

Lopn Monument Company. Pomeroy-Vinton. OH.
Cfl•m send mt fREE boo~lets showinc m011orials

printed in full color with sizes and priets listed .

Olindly havt an authorized Loaan Monu ... nt Co. repro·
Sllllltivt call •t my home.
Cfltllt 11nd mo dotails about Mausol,.ms without
oblla•lion.
llantt ..................................................................... .

Str"t or Route ....................................................... .
City or Town ........................................................... .
Phone ................................................................... ..

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

.. ~ :j ..

- ''

. ,.'
•!

' •

10% Deposit
and BalarKe

in Convenient
Low Montly
Payments

Reg. 239.95

Low M 120,Per Month on CHII.in..
Solenoid operation! Dolby• B-C
NR cuts t11P9 hiss, extends dynamic range. N14-631
' TM ~by LabOrarortea Lieenolng COrp.

Stereo Cassette
Portable

By Realistic

SCR-9 by Realistic

~ HffHf HHfH- :

HALF PRICE

Reg. 59.95

27gs&amp; ~~ ......-

Reg. 379.95
Low Ao $20 Per
Month on CHILine•
22 WATIS PER CHANNEl , M
INIMUM RMS
INTO 8OttMS FROM 20-20.000 Hz.
WITH NO MOfll THAN 0.1'11 THO

CTR-65 by Realistic

·r·--.- -- - ---;

Cut 20%

Bypass &amp; EQ Pu8hbuttona
Slide-action controls let you
boost or cut response up to 12
dB in seven bands. #31-1989

Record From AM/FM or •"Live"
Auto-level recording, "sleep"
switch, dual speakers. AC/banery
operation. N14-779 Banor• extra

Cordless Telephone

Answerer

Your
Choice

aan.,.,, "'"' HALF PRICE

Reg. 49 ' 95 Both With Variable Monitor Reg. 79 ·95
Auto-level lor pertect-IIOfume reRecords directly oN-1he·air or
cordings everytime. Audible cue/
"live" with built-In electret mii&lt;e.
review. Built-In mike. "Sleep"
Tone control. AC/banery operaswitch. lt14-t012
tion. tl4-1003

4-Ch. Scanner Radio

30o/o Off

Coupon For
Further
Information

Reg. 139.95
Low Aa120 Per
Month on CltiLine •
Make and take calls
anywhere! Memory
stores 16 numbers.

6995

9995

._Oi.JJ T~:;~:=~~Touch#43-550

Reg. 98.95 "
Hear pollee, lire,
weather, trains and
morel &amp;an-delay,
control.

Save
130

99.95
Records callers tor up to three
minutes or gives announcements
only. Voice aellvation aaves tape.
Ouak:a888He operation. #43-246

Minisenem-t2 by Realistic

3995

Save'40
Reg.

--

Portable·AM/FM Cassette Recorders

-·

Reg. 79.95

----

Two of the rnost-~anted components in
one space-saving enclo~urel Oigilaisynthesized receiver has six AM, six FM
~emory presets, digitallluorescenl tuning
display. Cassette has Dolby B-C noise reduction and soft-touch controls. #3t-1998

OPEN MNINGS AND
SUNDAYS .IY
APPOINTMENT
Simplr Mail Us The

VINTON, OHIO -GALLIA COUNTY
DISPLAY YARD
JAMES 0. lUSH,
MANAGIR
PHONE 311·1603

ALL COLOR
COMPUTER
SOFTWARE IN
STOCK NOW

- -

---

3995 4995

Cut ·
33%

f,

VHF-Hi/lo
UHF-HI/i.o

2-Way Speaker
MC-1201 by Realistic

HALF

,.--.....

PRICE

29t~

Reg. 59.95
Save $60 on a pair!
8" woofer, 2 1/2"
cone tweeter. Walnut '/llne&amp;r. 17'/•"high. ,4Q.t990

Check Your Phone Book for the ladl8111aek Store or Dealer Nearest You ·
·rOUCH-TONEJPIJLSE i)IIOOIS wort&lt; on both tone'"" puiso ines. Tnorom, ~ 1111SIIni10 Ollly potoe (rotory cliO) inn, )Oil can tlil u!t servi&lt;es "''l*innIWS. lit tnonew i0ft9-rlstance systems

IIIII"""""'"""
crerlt lrom Citibank. P&gt;ymont

!tl'll:n.

•Citlino revo~Yirl9

.

may vary ~ upoo bolance.

·.·#·

,, .,;

M;arauders triumph
story, photo 011 Page 4

•

at y

•

.

.

•

enttne
Additional layoffs studied in Jackson
Vol.36, No.178
Copyrighted 1986

1 Section, 10 Pagel 25 Cants
A Muhimadia Inc . Newapopor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 30, 1985

sales tax to boost revenue. Commission MalVIn
Keller upheld the unanimous approval required for an
emergency tax. A successful petition drive blocked a
non- emergency 1 percent sales tax, which voters
turned down In November.
The financial criSis climaxed In the fall, when the
jail closed and county judges sought an ChioSupreme
Court order forcing a tax Increase to fund county
operations. The land sale averted the legal
confrontation.

School District, private donations and volunteer labor
that kept several offices open after payroll funds ran
out.
By adoptJng a budget before the beginning of 1986,
commissioners hope to get an early start on some of
the cutbacks. The 1985 budget, which was$'JXJ,OOIIess
than the year before, was not adopted until March
whlle offices operated at 1084 budget levels.
Even afterward, · most offices delayed layoffs
hoping conunissloners would enact an emergency

Commissioner Ed Mlchae I said the county wUI
have to go to the voters again In May for another try at
a 1 percent sales tax. This time, he said,
commissioners will promise that one-fourth of any
sales tax revenues will be distributed to townships,
roads and bridges.
Keller said he opes the county officeholders leaned
a les!nn this year and will go alog with the budget
cuts. "All d us are going to have to buckle down and
do a little more," he said.

Work begins
on radiation
unit at HMC

NEWPORT, Ky. (UPI) - An immediate danger, pollee spokesex-convict, claiming his mind Is so man Jim Kim said.
Pollee said Lucas had served a
"sick" from drugs that he killed two
people, fended off police with prison tenn for theft "oomewhere
gunfire today and demanded In Indiana," and that the gurunan
$50,001 and airline tickets to Europe was "an acquaintance" of the two
for himself and two leenage hostages.
Pollee cordoned off four blocks In
hostages.
the
area, but made no attempt to
"I made a mistake. I'm a big
heroin addict, and everything," the rush the home.
In one of four caDs to the radio
gunman, Dennis Lucas, 20, told a
radio station news director Sunday station, Lucas demanded $00,001
' night. "My mJnd Is just sick, I have and three alrUne tickets to Europe
a real sl~k mind, because prison for hllnself and his hostages, and
makes your mind sick."
said he wanted at least $1,001
Lucas took Larkin Wardlow, 16, Immediately ·"to show that they're
and his brother, Robert, 14, hostage wtUJng to negotiate."
He told WLW news director
at about 5 a.m. Sunday. He fired
Kathy
Lehr he wanted to go
'random shots Sunday and early
today to keep pollee from approach- "anyplac~ where they won't extraIng the boys' home. No one was dite me," and he said he was takJng ·
the boys with him "because I'm oot
injured by the shots.
In calls to Cincinnati radio station dumJ, they will go with me. And we
WLW, Lucas said he would rather will be put oo a plalie ·with my
die · than 'retumr to priSon 'and guns."
The gunman said he had been
claimed to have kllled two people. A
body was later found by pollee !nan imprisoned for a crime he did not
area where Lucas said It had been · commit, adding, "Before I go back~
(to prtson), I wUI put a lliDet In my
dumped .
Pollee said Lucas had at least two head."
Lucas told Lehr he got out of
guns In the ground-noor apartment
of the house, located In a residential prtson recenlly and that drugs had
area across the Ohio River from twisted his mind. But he said his
hostages "know they'renotgolngto
CONS'IRlJCrJON BEGINS -:- Coaslnlctlon In
Cincinnati.
get
hurt"
because
"I
don't
want
to
preparation for the lnstellodon of a Unerar
A woman 11nd her two children
accelerator at Holzer Medlcel Center has begun.
were trapped In an upstairs apart- hurt nobody but these Newport
Pictured at the construction site are, left to right, Dr.
ment, but apparently were In no cops."

Construction In preparation for
the lnstaltatlon of a Linear Acceler-

Thomll!l W. Morgan, chalnnan of the depanmeat of

surgery, Tom ChUds, vice-president for professional
services, and Dr. Carol Sholtis.

Renewed violence interrupts Reagan holiday plans
.•

PR0-24 by Realistic

LOGAN
MONUMENT
CO.,
INC.
POMOOY, 01110-MEIGS COUNTY

Record lrom AM, FM stereo, or
"live" with bu!R-In mikes. StereoWide"' adds depth. AC/banery ,
operatiOn. N14-765 BaHeries o&gt;&lt;tra

SCR-301 0 by Realistic

ET-400 by Radio Shack

WRm FOR BOOKLETS SHOWING MEMORIALS IN fULL
COLOR WITH SIZES AND PRICES STATED

DISPlAY YARD NEAR
POMEROY-MASON IRIDG£
1£0 l. VAUGHAN, MGR.
PHONE 992-2588

95
139
100

Save

•so

r------------------

Reg. 139.95

[•w•·~ Save •100 t=:==:==.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::======:::;::;

Save

$895°0

SCR-15 by Realistic

AM/FM Stereo Cassette/Receiver With Dolby

WINTER.SPECIALS

This beautiful ever·lasting grey granite
campaign memorial is 62 inches long
with a lovey genuine white marble flower
vase.
SPECIAL

e 84K Extended Color Computer 2
• Color IHak Drive 110
e DMP-105 Dot·Mtdrlx Printer
• Color Deekmate" Software
• Color Mouse • Printer Cable

Start qomputing lor le5s! Ideal
lor tun, home and educational
uses. Write programs in ex,
tended BASIC, use 7-in-t
Reg. Seperate Hems 904.70
Deskmate or other ready-to-run
software. N26-312713t2913259/
LCM As S23 Per Month on Cnlllne• 3020/t276/3025

SCT.SO by Realistic

·.. '
: .~ .

Reg. 59.95 .
-Keep in touch! 3
watts output With
channel14 crystals.
N2t-t637

300//0

704 GRAND CENTIAl AVE.
VIENNA, W. VA.

Portable Cassette

Cut
330/o

Leal tweeter, 12" woofer, 5" midrange. Walnut veneer. 263/•" high.

HOURS: MON.-FRI. 9-9; SATURDAY 9·5

...'· ,...

Reg. 149.95

TRC-214 by Realis1i~

Save

IN STOCK WALLPAPER

$1200°0

.

3-Ch. Walkie-Talkie

by Realistic

HUGE SELECTION OF

REGULAR

9995

Low Aa $20 Per Month on Cnlllnh
All·!n-one system riow even more affordable! Record high-quality cassettes from
,AMIFM radio, 2-speed turntable, or "live"
with optional mikes. *t 3-1220

Low~ 120 Per 1;~~2:J
Month on CHILI!~e• "

DRASTICALLY REDUCED
HURRY IN FOR BEST SELECTION

, _._:.,•

-'Crazed' ex-con
holds 2 hostages

'

warranty seMce 1'4:&amp;ilable through WebCOr.
Not all c:c:Hots in all stores.

WALLPAPER SUPERMARKET
AND BLIND SHOP

Jn a oospltal.
Pollee kUied one of the terrorists
there. Two others were apprehended a short time later trying to
leave the airport ln a car they had
commandeered.
In a telephone call to the SER
radio network In Malaga, Spain, a
man saying he re;&gt;resented a
Palestine Liberation Organization
faction claimed responsibility for
the attacks. The faction Is headed
by terrorist Abu Nidal, who broke
with PLO chief Yasser Arafat in
1974 claiming Arafat was too
moderate.

JACKSON, Ohio (UPI) - Jackson County
commissioners will study today a budget of slightly
more than $1.9 million that may have to see more
workers laid off In that financially troubled southern
Ohio county.
The proposed budget Is about $100,&lt;00 more than
last year when numerous workers were laid off and
the county jail closed for more than a month.
Late In 1985, the county's funds were holstered by
the $140,001 sale of county land to the Jackson City

Touch-Tone/Pulset Dial
Phone

Stereo Headphone$

THRU JAN. 31, 1916

du
died late Friday. They were waiting
for a TWA flight to Greece.
AP correspondent Simpson,
whose daughter died In the attack,
was among the 74 people wounded
In the carnage. He was hit In the
right wrist, and his !no, Michael, 9,
was shot In the back. Simpson's
wtfewasoustldewalklngthefamlly
dog and was not Injured.
The attack on Vienna's Schwechat Airport came about ~: 40 a.m.
In .an upstalrs .departure lounge as
El AI passengers waited to board a
filght to Tel Avtv. One passenger
died at the scene and a second died

Story on Page 5

'

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (UP!)- lence to famllles of the dead
President and Mrs. Reagan, arrivAmericans.
Ing to cheers from well-wishers
The administration, concerned
young and old, left Los Angeles
the bombJngs could Ignite a new
Sunday to ring In the new year amid cycle of viOlence and further
growing concern of renewed vio- complicate the Middle East peace
process, kept an anxious eye on
lence in the Middle East.
After two days of seclusion In Israel, which vowed reprtsals
their S,OOJ.square-foot Los Angeles against those responsible for the
holt! sultt:. the president and Mrs. attacks directed against the Israeli
•Reagan continued their end-of-the- alrUne El AI.
year tradition of flying to Palm
Israeli officials blamed PalestiSprings to spend New Year's at the nian terrorists for the bombings.
sprawling estate of millionaire The kllllngs ot three Israeli tourists
publisher Walter Annenberg.
aboard a yacht In Cyprus by
As their motorcade arrived at the Palestinian gunmen in late Sepmain gale of the heavily guarded tember provoked an .Israeli air
Annenberg compound, the Rea- strike against Palestine Liberation
gans stopped 1o greet a bout a dozen Organization headquarters In Tunineighborhood children, one of sia, with a heavy loss 11 civlllan Ufe.
whom held a sign reading, "Please
Mindful of the reverberations
shake our hands."
from that Incident, the administraWhile White House aides took tion counseled Israel and other
pains lo ensure his Callfomta governments In the region Saturvacation remains a quiet one, day to exercise restraint and avol&lt;f_
Reagan headed for Palm Springs "an escalation of violence m either
concerned about the aftermath of side."
terrorist bombings Fr iday at airThe twin terrorist attacks Friday
ports In Rome and VIenna that were among several matters killed"at least 18 people, including . foreign and ' domestic - that
fi ve Americans.
received presidential attention as
En roule aboard Air Force One, Reagan kept out of sight In Los
Reagan signed leiters of condo- Angeles.

Responding to reports from the
Soviet news agency Tass that
rejected U.S. accusations it violated
nuclear anns treaties and denounced an American nuclear test
In the Nevada desert, White House
spokesman Peter Roussel, aboard
Air Force One, said:
"The United States Is in full
compUance with all arms control
agreements and I don't anticipate
us responsdlng further untn we've
studied the tun text of their
agreement."
On Saturday, Reagan taped an
unprecedented New Year's greetIng to the Soviet people, denounced
the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan In his weekly radio address and
placed a call of support to a
fund-raising telethon for the United
Negro College Fund.
The social pace picks up Monday
night, when the Reagans join
dozens of friends and acquaintances, Including members ol his
of!lcial Cabinet and his old "Kitchen Cabinet" of unofficial advisers, for a pre- New Year's bash at
the posh El Dorado Country Club.
On New Year's Eve, the Annenberg mansion will be the site of a
gUttery black-tie celebration.

Telephone
finn seeks
•
mcrease
The Western Reserve Telephone
Co., which serves Coolville, Chester, Little Hocking and ReedsvUie,
has announced that It will seek a
$10.8 million rate Increase.
The official request to the Public
Ulllltles Commission of Ohio will be
filed sometime In late January and
would Increase the company 's
revenue about 16 percent.
The proposed Increase would
raise the average customer's local
bill by a bout $4. If approved, the
rates would not" go Into effect until
approximately the fourth quarter of
1~- The company's last rate
Increase was In 1982.
Company officials say recent
developmenls within the lnduslry
have contrtbuted 10 the need for I he
rate Increase.
"Both regulatory decisions and
technological change have been
major factors In the way all
telephone companies must operate," said Hugh Hindman. vice
president of opera! ions. "Areas of
our business !hat used 10 subsidize
local service--such as long distance
are disappearing. As a result, we as
well as other telephone companies,
w!Uhave to move rates closer to the
9CI(&lt;alt cost to· provide each ·

Woman treated after wreck
A GJiumbus woman was treated
and released Sunday evening at
Veterans Memorial Hospital following a single-car accident on Ohio
.
.
Joan E. Nease, 30, was treated for
facial bruiseS, hospital officials
said.
The Ga!Ua-Melgs post of the State
Highway Patrol said Nease ·was
northbound on 7, about two-tenths
of a mile south of Chester Twp. 293,
when she reportedly lost control of
her car when she swerved to avoid a
dog, went off the right side of the
road and struck an embankment.
~

~·

Nease's vehicle sustained heavy
damage In the 7: 10 p.m. Incident,
troopers said.
No Injuries were reported from
two Sunday accidents oo Gallta
County Highways, according to the
GaUia-Metlis post of the State
Highway Patrol.
Sheryl A. Hardyman, 22, of
Lexlllgton, l&lt;y., was westbound, on
U.S. ll Sunday afternoon when
troopers said a car driven by
Richard R. Jeffers, 16, 11 34031
WU!ow Creek Rd., allegedly pulled
from a private drive and struck
Hardyman's vehicle In the right
l

ator ai Holzer Medical Center has
begun, according to an announcement by Charles I. Adkins Jr., chief
executive officer of the hospital,
and Dr. 'flo~mas W. Morgan,
chairman ol the department of
surgery. Morgan chat"ed the ad hoc
Radiotherapy Comr lttee who InItiated the necessary plannJng for
the lnstaUatlon of the equipment In
November 1983.
The actual construction to renovale the existing space designed for
the Unear accelerator, began the
week before 'llrtstmas. Estimated
completion and Installation date Is
AprU 1, at a total cost11 $1.3mUI!on.
Space allocation was Included In the
previous construction necessary for
the CT scanner, completed two
years ago.
Being Installed Is a Siemens
Linear Accelerator, 6 MEV (megavoltage), the latest. state-of-the-art
radiation treatment equipment,
Adkins said. He pointed out, "To
have the linear accelerator avalla·
bie at the Holzer Medical Center
will mean thE '. pa !lent~ will no
longer have to travel over 100 miles
round trtp for radiation therapy".
Radiation therapy Is usually used In
conjunction with other forms of
medical chemotherapy In cancer
patients.
The application to the State
Department of Health for review
and approval was submitted In
AprU 1985 and the Certificate of
Need was approved In October 1985.
According to Adkins, the linear
accelerator should he available for
patient treatment by April 15.

side.
No Injuries were reported In the
2:45 p.m., which troopers said
caused rooderate damage to both
vehicles. Jeffers was cited for
faUure to yield.
Steven N. Pet.rle,l9, of Gallipolis,
was eastbound on Ohio 141 early
Sunday morning, when troopers
said he apparently fell asleep, went
off the right side of the road and
struck an embankment.
·
Petrie's vehicle sustained heavy
damage In the 3:30 a.m. acddent
and he was cited by the patrol for
faUure to control.

serVice.''
WAVES UPON ARRIVAL - President Reagan waves as he aefa off
Air Folft I at Palm Sprlnp Airport Sundlij'. The Reagan fllmly wiD
spend the New Ye&amp;l''s HoUday al6 the Rancho Mirage esWe of
publlllher Walter Anneburg. UPI.

I

The company also reports the
Increase Is neEded in order to
continue to Install modem, more
efficient switching and service
facilities.
Continued on Page 7

�~ommentary
Ill Court Sireei
Pomeroy, Ohio

The religion sections of our

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON

A~tEA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
rubllsher
PAT WIDTEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ Conlroller

•

Top religious

The Daily Sentinel

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300 words
long. A.liiE"IIers are- subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wOI be published. Letters should be In
good taste. addrE'sslng_lssut&gt;S, not personalities.

.1

Rosty's gift to
the Democrats
It the gift ol lite Is truly the greatest that can he given, the Democratic
Party may owe Dan Rostenkowskl the poUtlcal equivalent of the national
debt.
There we~ Democrats wbo thought the bluff and burty Chicago
congressman had gone soft In the head, not to speak In the Ideology, when
he enthusiastically welcomed President Reagan's tax reform proposal
earUer this year.
.
The House Ways &amp; Means Committee chalnnan not .only praised the
Republican Pl'fSklent's Initiative but went m televlskln to Invite the p.1bllc
to express support for tax reform by wrttlng him at the €apltol addressing their mall to just plain "Rosty" If they had trouble with the
name.
,
When Reagan proposed the tax reform measure, a lot of Dl!mocrats,
perhaps Including Rosty, saw more In It than a mere reviSIOn rt the Internal
revenue code to make taxes simpler and lalrer.
To them, the Reagan move was nothing less than a bold stroke Intended
to erase the Image of favoritism toward wealth and big business under
which the Republican Party has labored and lost elections for much of the
20th !;entucy.
_It, as It appeared, the GOP finally was p.1U!ngcloseto the Democrats In
tlje national contest for voter Identification, tax reform might be the single
eyent that coukl end whatever working class voting base the Democrats
s.,U held and propel the RepuhUcans Into majority status for decades to

newspaper are thin compared with
the rest of the paper- to the "real"
news, and even to the entertainment pages. Tb1s separation of
certain Items In a back section Is no
doubt necessacy, but It Is entirely
artltlclal. It re1Jects, perhaps, a
compartmentaUzatlon that we repeat In our minds and our lives. An
Important remln&lt;Er o! the forced
nature ot such division comes In the
year-end Issue of Christian Cen·
tucy, which gives a summacy of
religious news tor 1985, ranking the
top 10 religious stortes.
What Is Interesting, first of all, Is
wlllit the editors excluded: the
bombings supposedly connected
with Mormon documents; the
breakup of the Bhagwan Rajneesh's Oregon commune; the

New Year best wishes

storie~_______G_a_rry_W_,...i....,.-lls

motions Pat Robertson has made
toward running tor president;
Louis Farra}(han's anti-Semitic
troublemaklng - aU these were
Important religious stories, and
most of us (or, at any rate, I) would
have thought they QUalltled for the
top 10.
But I would not jlave thought,
Immediately anyway, that Mideast
terrortsm was the No. 3 religious
stocy. That was a real stocy. !ts
roots, nonetheless, are rellgkms,
and we underestimate rellglon
because we taU to recognize Its
permeating Influence, tor good or
evli, In the maJor events of our time.
Fundamentalist zealots are successful terrortsts, not because their
targets have demonstrated a su·
&gt;lne attitude, but because the
rrortsts have til{ broe of belle!

19.lls, clearly the most Important .
religious siocy was the faUUre of ·
churches to respond to the Nazis.
Which brings us to the second ·
stocy on the list, apartheid In South . ·
Africa. In the past, Ronald Reagan '
has referred to "godless fascism," '.
on the model or that '40s lavortte, ·
President Truman's Inevitable use
of the adjective "godless" before .
the noun "communism." But the ·
most Important thing about fascism was that It arose In Christian ·
countrtes, with the Implicit (some- ' •
times the explicit) blessing of the churches. It was tar from godless. ·
The same Is true of Christian South
Africa. Elsewhere In the same Issue ' ·
of Cbrlstlan Centucy, there Is an
account of the beginning of Advent ·
In a Johannesburg church - how
the pollee waited for the Service to ·
end before tear-gassing the crowd.
~ How can we doubt their piety?
Mercy Christmas, Mrs. Mandela. 'The editors "readUy" arrived at . ·
their choice for top stoiY. How
many of us would have anticipated ·
It? It Is the sanctuacy movement - ' ·
the civil disobedience of churches ·
on a scale, and with a dedication,
similar to that of the .early religious
protests of the' clvU rights movement. Certainly the most lmjlortant
religious f~re In this nation during · ..
the 1900s was Dr. Martin Luther . :
King. If we are looking lor another
King, the editors seem to lee!, it will ·,
be among people like those now ::
standing trial In Tucson lor shelterIng political refugees from Central
America. The choice Is a shrewd · ·
one, like the entire list.

behind them, the exemption from
narrower consideratiOns Of safetY
that artses from fanaticism.
Another religious "sleeper" was
the AIDS crtsls. What was lmpor·
tant, In the eyes ol the Christian
Century's editors, wbo place It
fourth on their list, was not only the
turmon caused In churches, but the
challenge of dealing with (or falling
to) the agony of some of ,the most
helpless and despised people In oor
ml!lst - the vecy people · our
rellglous traditiOns say should be
c3red for In God's name, since they
are so abandoned by men. Some
churches have symbolically let the
AIDS crtsls alter the sacrament o!
communion. Others have sUently
turned their backs. Lack of action
can be significant news for those
concerned with religious life. In the

this Byzantine game, according' to
Cassidy, Is to Ioree the United
States Into renewing diplomatic
relations, which would eventually
Increase the flow ot Yankee dollars
from an illegal trickle Into a legal
flood.
The Intelligence expert believes
there will he a growing problem o!
Hanoi-orchestrated crime In this
countcy, "particularly In organized
vice, currency operations, and the
groWth of small, highly mobile,
vlol!nt gangs."
As one example of communist·
controlled crtmlnal activity, Cassidy cited his Investigation of a
VIetnamese famUy's gold and
Jewelcy association In Southern
Calltornla. He said the family was
"plants!" there by Hanoi to send
cash and gold bullion back to
VIetnam using a network of jewelcy
shops as a cover.
In addition, large amounts of
credit were extended to Vietnamese wives of Amertcans with the
Idea that they could be blackmaUed
Into passing sensitive Information
to Hanoi - which would presumably pass any worthwhile Intelligence on to Moscow.
But another view o! VletnameseAmertcan crime Is offered by the
FBI. The bureau attributes the
crtme wave, not to Hanoi skullduggery, but to refugees who were
crtmlnals before they came here
.from South VIetnam.
"Some crtmlnal groups were
composed of mUitacy pe!'Sopnel
who used their positions to foster a

Paul Volcker. But the financial
number of rackets paralleltng
traditional crtmlnal enterprtses,"
community regar~ the affable .
an FBI report explained. Some ol
Martin as something of a light·
the VIetnamese crooks 119t their
weight, we're told, and that opposl·
start selling narcotics to Amertcan
lion Is enough to doom his chan res :
soldiers durtng the war and then
lor promotion. Martin realizes this, · .
"reestablished themselves In the
and Is already looking for a Job on
Unltoo States," the report added.
the outside, He may leave the Fed ·
The FBI Identified mixed Chinese by spring.
and VIetnamese gangs such as
Frogmen" and unmnderTigers,"
WHAT'S IN A NAME: While the · •
and said they have commltled
urgent search to find a cure tor •.
'murders, robbertes, lddnapplngs
AIDS continues, an arcane debate·
and extortion. Using the threat r1 a
Is going on In medical circles about "communist" label, the gangs
what to can the deadly virus that
squeeze money from refugees for
destroys
lls,victlms' Immune sys·
the ast£:Jlslble pmposeof organtzlng
tern.
ThecontendersareLAV,ARV
armed resistance to overthrow the
and IITLV-m. By any name the
Hanoi regime.
virus Invades a cell In such a 'way '
The President's Commission on ·
that It can't he kllled without
Organized Crlme disclosed that
destroying the ceU, too.
many VIetnamese criminals
sneaked lnlll the United States
MINI-EDITORIAL: Over the
using names or'dead persons who
last few months Congress has made
had no crtmlnal records. "These
an embarrassing spectacle of Itself
criminals were Involved In narcot.
with last-minute action to avoid
lcs trafficking, extortion and prostishutting down the government tor
tutiOn activities In VIetnam," a
commission document reported. tack of money to PliY Its bllls. First
there was a 30-day emergency
Once they made It through the
funding bUI, then a three-day
refugee camps, they emerged as
extension. With· any encouragepractitioners of the same kind of
ment (from the Gulnness people,
Wlclt, vkllent activity that was thetr
perhaps), we're sure Congress
trademark rn the streets o1 Saigon.
could devise a three-hour funding
bUI. When we see the world's
EYE ON THE ECONOMY:
greatest government managing Its
Preston Martin, vice chairman of affairs like a tlnanclally strapped
the Federal Reserve Board, has mom-and-pop grocery store, we
lOng been regarded as President almost think It's time to declare
Reagan's "man at the Fed" and the
bankruptcy and start over. Is this
anointed successor to Chairman
any way to run a countcy?
II

Christmas spirit

Today in history

•

J

but even more of an obstacle is the
government control of news media.
through censorship or other means,
that is evident in three-quarters of the
countries surveyed.
Two ol the most notable such situations are Nicaragua, where recent re·
strictions on civil liberties bit the opposition press especialty hard, and
South Africa, whose censorship restrictions Freedom House considers to
be the harshest there in decades. The
effort to black out publjc awareness or
continuing disturbances is counterproductive, however.
"The news ban, rather than addressing the causes of black anger," thereport notes. "is likely to increase ru·
mors and fear, which fuel further
unrest."
The year also produced some rela·
live good news. Government restrictions eased somewhat in Nigeria.
where previously detaine&lt;l journalists
were released, and in South Korea.
where 28 purged editors and reporters
were reinstated. Also, the South Korean opposition continues to press lor repeal of the restrictive basic press law.
But the limited progress is offset by
evidence that at least three Korean
journalists were subjected to torture
during the year.
Even better news is that the year
saw practical steps taken to protect
journalists On dangerous assignments.
An April meeting in Switzerland oi
media organizations, held under the
auspices of the International Red
Cross, bas led to the establishment of a
"bot line." In the event of lhe death,
capture or disappearance ol a journalist, concerned parties - family, editor, professional organizations - may
request intervention through Red
Cross channels. The numbers, both in

·~­

BIRMIN\,;tlAM, Ala. (UPI) Georgia Tech coach BUl Curcy
Insists his suspension of star
quarterback John Dewberry and
three other players was needed to
"inalntaln order" on his team just
days before the All American Bowl.
"Any time a successful family or
company or team functions, It
functions within certain guklellnes
and a philosophy and set of rules.
And that's exactly the way we
work," said Curry, whose team
laces Michigan State Tuesday (8
p.m. EST) at Legton Field.
Starting wide receivers Gacy Lee
and Toby Pearson. and reserve
fullback Charles Mack were ,suspended along with Dewberry Satur. day for violating Curry's ·1 a .m.

Sentin~l

A Division of ·Multlmeclla,lnc.

training

c~mp

next

"When you get older and realize
time Is running out you understand
how difficult It is to get here," said
New York center Joe Field, who
concluded his lith season. "You
can't be happy just to get to the
playoffs. That's not enough."
For the Patriots, 12-5, there is a
next week. They leave fl'Dm Boston
Tuesday for the sunshine of Los
Angeles to meet the Raiders on
Sunday In an AFC s~mlftnal
match up.
O'Brien had the Jets moving
early, but with New York leading
7-6 In the second quarter he threw
an Interception to New England
safety Fred Marlon. The Patrtots
converted the turnover into the
go-ahead score - Eason •s TI&gt;
strtke to Morgan.
• With the victory over the Jets, a
team the Patriots spilt with during
the regular season, New England's
outlook Is posltlve ·as one of eight
teams remaining In the Super Bowl
hunt.
"We have a right to be confl·
dent," said Patriots linebacker
Steve Nelson. "We played well over
the last 11 weeks and we won games
we had to win. When you win must
games you start gaining confl·
dence. ''

"•

~d Patriots

AFC Oiv. Playoff
Jan. 5
!liMA.

...__ _ _ _....;._, 1 Denotes host
c

Publlsht'd ('very afternoon, Monday

N.Y. GLints (1Hi)

team

NFC Div. Playoff

Jan. 5

llal*rs (12-4)

Chicago Bears (15-1)

•

NFC Championship
·January 12

AFC Championship
January 12
January 26
at Superdome.
New Orleans, LA.

Clilvtland lrawns
. AFC Div. Playoff
Jan. 4

Miami Dolphins (12-4)

Dallas Cowboys

(10-6)

NFC Oiv. Playoff
Jan. 4
L.A. Rams (11·5)

·

.·
UPI Graphic

~..;...;----:--------..._

·.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _- - I .•

Gi~ts el~inate

defending champs,
face Super Bo~l favored Bears Sunday .-

EAST RU1HERFORD, N.J.
Giants quarterback Phil Simms
(UPI) - The New York Giants aVoided the cdstly mistakes that
cleared a major stumbUng block cost New York. a division title. He
curfew Friday night - the Yellow Sunday, only to look face Drsf into C9J11pleted 15- ot-31 passes for 181
Jackets' first night In Birmingham. another.
yardsandtouchdownsoflSyardsto
Dewberry. a senior, threw for
The Giants' 17-3 vlctocy over the Mark Bavaro and 3 yards to Don
1,557 yar'ds and 10 touchdowns lor San Francisco Sunday avenged Hasselheck. Strtuns W;tS not sacked
the 8-2·1 Yellow Jackets, the playof1 losses to the 49ers In 1981 and. his only InterceptiOn was a
Atlantic Coast Conference runners- and 1984. It makes them 3-0 In wUd harmless heave at tlie end ol the
up. The 6-foot, 194-pounder led the card games, but they have failed to half.
ACC In passtng efficiency, complet· make It past the second round. The
lng 110-of-193 attempts.
playof1losses to the 49ers came In
. Simms hopes his pertonnance
Lee was his favorite target, years when San ,Francisco won the will end talk that he romes up short
grabbing 29 passes for a 22.2- yard Super Bowl and now the Giants are In blg games. :
·
average and six scores.
facing the favorite to win Super
"This was one of' the biggest
"This Is not Intended to embar· Bowl XX- the Chicago Bears.
games we played In our career,"
rass the players that we've had to
"We just played the defending New York linebacker Lawrence
suspend, It Is simply Intended to champions and It's nice to getthem •Tayk&gt;r said. "We did what we had to
maintain order on our team," said out of the way," Giants linebacker do."
Curcy, who has coached the Yellow Harcy Carson said. "We've been
' "We dldn'tlook past these guys,"
Jackets lor six years.
down this road before. Last year said Morris, wllo left the game with
"II I come to your house· was a valuabfe experience."
bruised ribs In the burth quarter
(recruiting) and promise you I'm
The Giants never felt as good
t*lt said he'li play Sunday In
going to be resJXlnslble for your son about winning a wUd card game as Chicago. "If vre did: they would
for lour or five years, then that's they did Sunday. They held the have kicked us·around the neld."
what I'm going to do. And that 49ers wttbout a touchdown lor the
doesn't Include turning him loo5e In first time since 1983 and controlled
a strange town," Curcy said. "I! you the ball with Joe Morrls' 141 yards
have a rule, you must keep it."
rusl~lng on 28 carrtes.

Eric Scl)ubert kicked a 47- yard
field goal on the Giants' fltst

possession but later missed tries
from 43, 36 and 39 yards. Beside
Schubert's misses. the Giants' only
costly mistakes were three defenslve penalties crammed Into San
Francisco's drtve lead ing to a Ray
Werschlng 21-yard field goal with22
seconds left In the half.
"The Giants played an absolutely
great football -game," 49ers coach
BUI Walsh said. "They played up to
playoff capabilities. To sum It up,
we were banged up and they
wtplayed us.
"W!! wUI be back, I promise you
publicly ...
The Giants shut down Joe
Montana until the fourth quarter
and Roger Craig ail together.
Montana completed 26·of47 tor296
yards and an Interception, but 12
completions and 135 yards came In
the fourth quarter.
"I think It's a big letdown," said

Montana, whose rtbs were sore
most of Ihe season. "Unfortunately.
you can't be 15- 1 evecy year. We ·
didn 't get It done. "
Bavaro's TD came four plays
after Terry Kinard's Interception
and gave the Giants a 10-0 lead.·
Hasselbeck's TD came on the first ·
drive ol the second half.

r-----------

THE GINGERBREAD BOY ..
SAYS ...
WE ' RE HAVING A :

SALE
SlOP IN AND SEE
US liND SAVEl
Ollftl Monlhlf· l•tq•u v
IGI.fn.- l : lG,.I'II .

701 SECOND ST!EET

•

O:NLY COOPER OFFERS

0/o

Ohio.
Member: United Pr(&gt;Ss lntt.&gt;rna!lonal,
Inland Dally Prt'ss Association and th&lt;'
Ohio Nl'wspajX'r Association. Nallonal
Advertising Reprf'St'ntatlvt', Branham
Newspaper Sales. 733 Third Avenut'.

ANNUAL
PfRClNTAGE

RATE

FINANCING'

New York . N(I'W York 10017.

'

POSTMASTER: ~nd addrE"Ss chan~l'!
to 1lK&gt; Dally Sfntln('l, 1U Court St.,
PorTEroy, Ohio ~~769 .
SUBSCRIPTION RATI!S
By Carrl~r or Mteor Rotate
Onl' W('('k ...... ... ... .... .. ........ ........ .SJ .lO
Onl' Month .... ........... ......... 1....... .$-t.fl)
Ont&gt; Yl'ar ... ... ... ........ ......... ....... S.'i7.00
StNGLECOPY
,
PRICE

.·

Dally ............. ...................... 2~ C.nls
Subscrlbl"rs not dPSirlng to pay tlwcJr·
rl{'f may rt'mlt In advanCf' dlrfltl to
'Jbp Dally Sc'&gt;nllnel on a .1, 1lor 12 mont h
basts. Crt&gt;dl! will be- I{IV('fl carriE'r !'ach
month.

CASH

BACK

No sull-icrlprlon!t by mallpt'rmurro In
towns whC'rC' hofTK' rarrtrr st"rvlrC' Is
avallabl ll.

Mall SuMct1pUon111
IMkle ·Ohlo

13 w..ks ..... .. ........................... 111.56
26 w..h ................................ .. S29.t2
~2 Wwk• .. ... ........ ... .................. $511.24

ing a skirmish between Sandinista
troops and contra raiding party.
Still, you never know what the future
holds.
I'm making a note of those numbers.

a

Oulolde Ohio
1.1 Wt'OkS ..... .. ......... .................. m.60
26 Wwks ............. ... ............... ... 131.20
~l Wwks ................ ......... .... ..... L\9.111

PROTECTION
PIAN"

UPENDED - New Volil Glanls running back Joe Morris, who
ru8hed for 141 yards aa;alnst the tiers Sunday Is upended by Jim
Famhorsl alter an eight yard gain at Eaat Rulherford, N.J. UPI.

TAKE YOUR CHOICE OF 8.6% APR FINANCING OR CASH BACK
OF •soo TO •1000. PLUS UP TO '50411N ADDITIONAL SAVINGS ON THESE
NEW '86 PLYMOUTH AND CHRYSLER CARS WHEN YOU CHOOSE
SPECIAL DISCOUNT EQUIPMENT PACKAGES.

Berry's -World

S1000 CASH BACK

S1000 CASH BACK
CHRYSLER LeBARON GTS PREMIUM
WXURY EQUIPijiENT •
DISCOUNT PACKAGE ... :

CHRYSLER LASER XE
POPULAR EQUIPMENT
DISCOUNT PACKAGE...,

·-rW)n1 -Door Locka

o Air CondiUonlng
o Llghll'lcilltll

""""'$1111

oSptedCGnlroi

o1111 Sltorlnti Column

dnd More..

ssoo CASH BACK

PLYMOUTH HORIZON
AUlOMATIC TRANSMISSION
DISCOUNT PACKAGE.,.,
oAIIlomlllc

-litton ·
o z:z.IJior Engino
o AMJfM S4orlt Rldlo o I'' Rill )yo WhHit

Breakfast Bar is open

11:00 p.m.-3:00a.m., New Year's Eve

~
I• I (f) tfl'

Make Shoney's the last place you go New Year's
Eve. Stop in and enjoy golden pancakes, sausage,
eggs, whatever you want. As much as you want.
It's a perfect way to top off your night!
·

b)i NEA, InC.

"The LIVE bowl games areal/ over. Now, 1can
go watch the ones I TAPEQI"

..

PLYMOUTH RELIANT SE ~ltir.J·;l\.
POPULAR EQUIPMENT
OISCOUNT PACKAGE-

SAVE ssoo MORE

SAVE .S504 MORE

SAVINGS BASED ON H-jE STICI((\R PRK:E OF OPTIONS IF PURCHASED SE PARATELY '~lllllble lo quahfi8CI rettrl bwers lhrougn Cl'lfY$1er Cr0011Corporii\Of\

S!t~

Dealer COI'ItrlbuiiOn may ,tl~ lrna!p~C;e E~cludel teases $1M peirhcrpaltng dellfr lot deii!IS '' Ste 5/50 lrmrled Wllllnl~ al OOalfiiS E•Ciu&lt;ltS IB3!W5 ResWCliOfll apply

•

COOPER

Dinner Thble~

1
CHRYSLER-PL
YMOUTH-DODGE
399 So. 3rd
992·6241
Middleport, OH.

Free cabbage with any meal on New Year's Day.
,•

• And More...

'• Alltomllic hntmiulon 1 Pvwtr Sttering o Tlnled Gins
o AM/fM Stno Rllllo o And More.. .

o """'Steering
o And -

• Rur Dofrotl
o Pvwtr Mlno~

SAVE S300 MORE
ssoo CASH BACK

SAVE S300 MORE

..

.
I

'

I

\

•

MISON, W. Vl •

773-5977

r--------..:....----------==------J------------

through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by tht Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlng Compan~· t Multlmedla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. ~ ·
cond.cla~s postage paid at PomE'roy.

Don Graff •

. ..

~:~m~.tll

Four players get suspensions

(USPS II ll-11410)

'

Geneva, are 22·34-60·01 lor telephone
and CICR 22-269 by telex.
My own beat bas been pretty quiet
since the hairy incident in late 1983
when I was pinned down in an Indian
village in the Nicaraguan outback dur-

In the regular season time Is
measured In weeks. In the playoffs
that balana&gt; Is skewed. There Is
nextweekforthewlnner, butforthe
loser It becomes an unbearable

The Daily

..

Occupational hazards

EAST RutHERFORD, N.J .
(UPI)- Hours alter the York Jets
were eliminated from the AFC
playoffs with their 26-14 loss to the
New England Patrtots, workers at
Giants Stadium removed the last
~lges ot what had been an
ou ISlanding season. ·
In a hurcy to prepare for
Sunday's NFC wild card game
between the New York Giants and
the San Francisco 49ers, the ground
crew worked into the night stripping the Jets' end zone logos and
replacing them with those of the
Giants.
The NFL playott_s place a
premium on performance. Those
who don't perform, as was the case
with the mistake- prone Jets on
Satunlay, have their season rolled
up and placed In storage untO next
summer.
"We made the turnovers and they
didn't," said Jets coach Joe Walton,
wholedNew York toan11-6season.
"We got ourselves Into the hole,
turns! the baD over tour times with
two tumbles and fwo lriterceptklns.
They didn't tum the ball over and
that spells trouble."

-~

NFL
Playoff
Schedule

Patriots dismantle
N.Y. Jets, 26-14

I

Vietnam crime gangs __Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rs_o_n_&amp;_D_ple_Va_n__:1_tt___;a.;

WASffiNGTON- Criminal activity Jn VIetnamese-American
communities Is thriving. Law·
enforcement agencies glumly
agree about that. As we've recome.
ported. organized gangs of VIetna:Some Republicans at the White Hoose and oo Capitol Hill might have
mese
are operating In as many as 13
been a tad suspicious about Rosty's rush to sign up In the Reagan tax
states.
r~form army, but they couldn't vecy weD p.1hUc(y accuse him of harboring
· But what the frustrated authoriulterior motives when be was going aU rut to help their presideD'.
ties can't agree on Is the source of
; In tact, they had to have his support If the legislation was going to go
the crime wave. Is It a communist
anywhere, because the Constitution says, "All btlls tor raising revenue
plot, or merely what could have
shaD ortglnate In the House r1 Representatives" and Rosty runs the show
.
been
expected when a wave of
oil ,the House committee that deals with tax legislation.
refugees
swept Into tlils coimtcy
·•And run the show he did. Remembering the dd saw, "The ll'esldent
durtng and after the VIetnam War?
proposes but Congress disposes," Rostenkowskl klwered taxes tor the
Clearly, some ot the refugees
near· poor and raised the Reagan· proposed rates lor high Income
were
less than upright pillars of the
lndlvlduals and corporations. That made It JXlSSible br Speaker Thomas
community
back In VIetnam.
O'Neill, D- Mass.. to claim Democrats had "rescued tax reform !rom the
The
"Hanoi
mastermind" theocy
jaws ol big business Republicans (and) delivered on our historic
was laid out In a recent report by
commitment to tax fairness."
Wllllam Cassidy, a former U.S.
Then the House Republicans blumered right lnkl Rostenkowsld's web.
consultant,
at a prtvate conterenoe
Instead of swaUowlng the Rostenkowsld bill and leaving It· to the
ol
law-enforcement
ottlcers In
Republican Senate to restore It to the GOPfonnat, they walked oot oo the
Houston.
It
provided
some starbill and the president.
tling, It anecdotal, evidence that
That ]lilt Reagan In the humWatlng position to have to heghls own troops
extortions
and murders In VIetnafor votes to get the biD through the House. He got them, but the episode
mese
communities
In the United
probably destroyed any chance ilr Republican campaign strategists to
States
are
sometimes
tnstlgatl!d, or
credibly claim In I~ and thereafter that the GOP alone Is the party that
at
least
encouraged,
by communist
really cares about the average taxpayer.
agents sent here by Hanoi.
Tax reform may -pass sooner or later, but It Is not likely to be the
The analysis was reviewed by rur
Republican Party's gift to the nation when It does. Keeping that !rom
associates
Corley Johnson and
happening Is Rosty' s gift to the Democrats.
Donald Goldberg. Its basic claim Is
that "agents provocaeurs" have
Inmtrated anti-communist Vletna·
mese groups and fomented violence
against known communists. The
.
point of this bizarre activity Is to
discredit the anti-communist
groups and thus create favorable
The Tuppers Plains emergency the heart when battUng Icy road- propaganda for the Hanoi regime.
squad would Uke to wish everyone ways and stormy weather. Thank
The communists' ultimate goal In
In their coverage area a happy New you all lor the cards and donations;
Year. Through the support of the we look forward to serving your
people here oor volunteer work has needs through 19Bil.
become a rewarding expertence
Darlene Cassady
this past year. A simple thank you
Tuppers Plains EMS
can warm the hands and especially
--~
II has been another rough year for
the world press.
Not onl~ in terms of the wars, riots,
natural dl88sters, summit meetings
and the like that have bad to be reportAs I drove from my home to work pie smUe, buy presents, help the ed, but also in terms of the toll taken
only a few days after Christmas I needy, feel all warin and good of thole doing tbe rep.or.tiog.
noticed a garbage truck ftlled with Inside.. . that feeling rt love tor
Freedom House, the New York·
thrown out Chrtstmas trees, as I everyone you meet. Is that also baled organization that keeps watch
entered towli I noticed Olrlstmas tossed out the front door the day on freedom's ups and downs worldwide, is juat out with its annual report
trees just thrown out In the front after Christmas?
on
the perils of the press and the reyard, some decoratiOns stUI cllngIt may be hard to hang on vecy
port
makes especially grim reading.
litg to the branches. The trees that long to the decorated Christmas
The last year has seen a significant
srood so pretty. bright and colorful b-ee, It takes up room and drops Increase in violence directed at newIn famU!es Itvlng room windoM, needles on the floor. But liOmethlng speople on the job. Thirty journalists
tOssed out In the cold ooly a day or should remain as a reminder of !" II countries were killed, up !rom 21
tWo after Christmas.
Christmas other than the ~ts m 1984. Another 13 were held hostage
: This makes me wonder If that Is and left over food. Why not hang on or were abducted and have not been
also what happens to the Christmas to the Splrtt of Christmas ?It doesn't heard from since, 76 were assaulted or
5plrlt that Is talked about so much take up much room. only a small otherwise physically harassed, and
109 were detained by authorities for
up until Christmas day. That space In the II!! art .
vacylng perlodJ. lncreaaes over the
wonderful feeling that makes peoSherrt L. Hart previous year in all categories.
The_sole exception to the upward
trend is in expulaioDJ, Only nine correspondents so far have been booted out
by host countries, down from 22 last
year.
Half ol the journalist deaths were in
: Today Is Monday, Dec. JJ, the :Ji4th day of 1985 with one to t&gt;llow.
the Philippines. That, under those cir·
' The moon is moving toward Its last quarter.
cumslances, Ph!Uppine reporters are
: The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and saturn.
carrying on Is, Freedom House ob. The evening star Is Jupiter.
serves, "a mark of high courage."
; Those born on this date are under the sign of Cap_rlcom. They Include That could be understating it Ol)ce the
presidential campaign and accompaI Wr II Prime nying
J;lrjtlsh author RudYard Kipling In 1865, Japan's Word
political passions really rev up.
Minister Hldekl Tojo In 11184, former Miss America Pageant emcee Bert
"Physical assaults on journalists efParks In 1914 (age 71 l, rock 'n' roll pioneer Bo Dlddley In 1928 (age!J7), 'and fectlvely generate caution - even
fonner Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Sandy Koutax In 1935 (Jge 00).
self·censonhlp - in covering controOn this date In hlstocy:
versial events or personalities," the
In 1851. the United States bought sbme 45,00) square miles of land along report notes. "Investigative reporting
the GUa River from Mexico for $10 mUUon.lt nowconlprtses the southern Is notably dl~lnishheed In a climate of
rts of Arizona and New Mexico. .
v1o1ent attac ... on t news media. As
pa
· a co11$equence, the flow of mlorma·
In 1900, 002 people died when lire swept through the Iroquois Theater In tlon to the public is impeded."
·
hlcago.
Less dramatic than overt violence

Letters to editor

~Mron;da~y.~D_ece
7m_ber~.:.30.:.;·:..1~9~8;5----:--~--~====Po=mero=:Y:-:M:idcl::leport.==o:h:io:·=::===========~The;D~a;ilv;;Sen;ti~n;ai~Pag~e~~-..

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ,
Monday. December 30. 1985 :

..

�Monday, December 30, 1985
Monday. December 30, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page- 4-The Daily Sentinel

Six· killed in airplane crash

·Marauders post ninth straight victory, 68-52
ROCK SPRINGS - Fourteen
fourth period free throws bel~
unbeaten Meigs roll to its' ninth
straight win with a 68-52 victory
over non-league foe Athens here
Saturday.
Although the Marauders never
trailed the entire ball game, Athens
stayed within striking distance until
the final six minutes when the
Bulldogs narrowed the gap to six,
49-43. At one point .In the third
quarter, Meigs had taken a 14-polnt
margin, 46-32.
Athens scored the final seven
points of the thlrd period to make It
46-39 and with six minutes left, the
Athens Countalns were down .only

49-43.
Meigs senior forward Mike Chancey, who led all scorers with 20 and
rebounders with 17, rattled In 10
points In those final slx minutes as
Coach Greg Drummer's charges
steadily pulled away. The final
16-polnt margin was the largest of
the game . .
Rick Wise, Meigs' 5-9 senior
guard, followed with 17 points and
was Instrumental In holding hils
team's lead late with his ballhandling. Senior Shawn Baker and
,junior J. R. Kitchen each scored
eight points.
Steve Maccombs led Athens with
14 points and also rebounding with

sOme more."
Wlth both teams seeking the
same strategy, Southern erputed to
a one-sided 18-8 first period lead.
~oach Howle Caldwell praised his
t~m·s first period ·efforts, saying,
•'We played very well the first
#rlod. We missed six lay-ups...we
had 18 points and had a good chance
for])."

_

..

Warriors capture
Meigs tourney
98 lb.-Matt Yinger tN·Y), Rod
Henthorn (WLI , Anthony Fondale
(N L).

100 lb.-Don Phlllips 1G), Chad
Cox (P), Trent Ball (N-Y).
112 lb.-Brian Knotts (WL), P. D.
Rase (1 ), Dave Rogers (N-Yl.
119 lb.-Rod Woodruff (WL),
Larry Mason (P), Shannon Mayes
(G).

126 lb.-Matt Johnson (WL), Arlie
Leark tM), Rob Goodwin (CG) .
1321b.-Ertc Anderson (WL), Sam
Robinson (P), Joho Jackson (G) .
138. 1b.-Pee Wee Robinson (G).
Robert SissOn (M), Daren Morgan.
145 lb.-Jim Milleson (!), Randy
Henthorn (WL), Wes Clark tNL).
155 lb ..Joho Huffman ( NL).
Denny Davis (T), Lenny Jobin (I) .
167 lb.-Troy Ebbleblute (WL),
Danny Carter (N-Y) , Craig Woltz
(NL) .
175 lb.-Heath Ebbleblute (WL),
Kevin Neal (P), Jeff Southers (I) .
1851b.-Bill Bruce (1), Dean Willis
tCG), Eric Parsley (N·Y).
HWT~1m Ross (Pl. J . D.
Anderson (WL), Shawn Ward
(N-Y) .

~

~ The

rress International

Ohio State Buckeyes nearly
rned a game-long deficit Into a
ctory over 19th- ranked Texas·El
so Sunday night, but fell short 1n ·
~ final seconds.
~ And OSU Coach Eldon Miller
sfYS. the Buckeye didn't deserve to
~

".Juden Smith hit the front end of a
t;.o-shol free throw with four
I;CCOnds left to 11ft tbe Miners to 58-57
victory. Smith, who finished with 17

DRmBLI!8 UP FLOOR- Melp' Rick Wise (U, dribbles up tile floor
lllllll' Athenll' Tim Adams In backpound and In front of the Bulldop'
Jeff GeofMaN!ko (4&amp;) during leCOIIIICJ~arter action o!Saturday's&amp;S-52
vlclory at Larry R. Morrllon Gym. Wise had 17 polnls tllld was
lnalmrnentalln holdlnJ his team's lead with his crafty ballhantDing.

North Gallia wins
Holiday Tourney
CHESHIRE - North GaiDa
broke Hannan Trace's hold on tbe
Gallla County Holiday Tournament
Saturday, posting a 62-56 ·vtctory
over the cold shooting Wildcats.
Hannan Trace had won the
tournament In 1983 and 1984, while
North Gallla and finished second
the tournament's first three years
before being upset In the first round
last year by Southwestern.
The Highlanders, first round
losers to North Gallla Friday,
defeated Kyger Creek ln the
consolation game, 6046.
The Pirates (7-1). led by Mike
Kemper's 19 points and nine
rebounds, placed four players in
double figures In handing the
Wildcats their second loss of the
year.

North Gallla controlled the game
from the beginning, jumping to a 50
lead In the first 1:00. The Pirates led
16-7 after one quarter and 33-21 at
the half.
·Hannan Traj:e (7-2) did not get
untracked offensively until the
fourth quarter, making two of 11
field goal attempts In the opening
period and 10 of 40 through three
quarlers.
Both coaches attributed North
Gallla's win to defense and desire. '
"We used three defenses," Pirate
coach Bruce WilsOn "Said. "We
thought II we kept switching our
defenses we could get them out of
their flow and handle them. The
start was very Important becuase
we felt the ltrst couple of minutes
would set the tempo."

"We played tentatively In the first
half," Wildcat coach Mike Jenkins
said. "We got Into foul trouble, got
too far behind early and couldn't
make II up. Give them (North
Gall Ia) credit. They wanted It
badly,"
Phil Bailey and Deke Barnes,
Hannan Trace's two AU-SVAC
guards, each picked up their third
foul early In the second quarter,
hampering the Wlldcats' offense.
North Gallla led 50-39 with 4:40
left In the game, when Hannan
Trace starled a run at the Pirates.
The
Wildcats twice cut the margin
points, went to the line after being
fouled by the Buckeyes' Brad to six, but could get no closer.
Todd Holstein and Todd Dee!
Sellers, who led OSU with a
each
scored 1~ points for North
game-high 27 points.
Gallla
and Paul Lee added 10.
Sellers, who also pulled down 18
Sean
Colley paced Hannan Trace
rebounds, saki the Buckeyes' poor
defensive effort In the first halfled with 19 points and 11 rebounds.
Batley and Barnes each added 10
to their downfall.
The Buckeyes battled back from for the Wildcats.
North Gallla was 23-49 from the
a 12-polnt deficit In the first half,
floor
(46.9 percent) anci 16-22 from
then tied the game with 21 seconds.
remaining on a Jay Bu1'90n under- the foulllne (72.7 percent). Hannan
Trace was 21·55 (:§l.l percent) from
hand SCOOP shot.

Jluckeyes beaten
in final seconds
~ By United

.,

(lh - Rick Wise IHI1. Brad Roblnson

~1'111-t ·6 .

•1. R. KltC'hen ."l-2-11. HUM' Eason J.J-3.

!"ttll Kinp;().{l.(l, Don ~cr 00.0. ChriS Kerull'dyO.O.O,

Scali Powell WiJ. SIC'\'('
().().{), 'IVI'I\111 =-11141.
By Qllll rtrrs:
Athrns

""'"'

Mu~9t'r (Hl.(),

JfUP Hawlnl

;, 10 15 13 -52
-68
KflifltVI'Jj
tR 1 ~ 1:1 22

I\111ENS (Ill - l»ug Slc!Dfl.'l' 1-6-2, Corry
Carrigan HJ.R, Chutk COC' G.l-2, i&lt;wln O'Lt'ary O.f·2.
Grt'g Williams 2·0-f, Jcrcy Jom: M8, Norman
DupiN" 0.3·:1, Jim Frnk&gt;y 1·1-1. TOTW tJ..Wt.
MEIGS CH)- S(x)ll Wlllhuns 4-2-10, Bill Brothlors
.l :H~. 0011 [)01'!(1 1·4-6, Milw Barhwn .\.2-8, Chris
Smllh 4-J.ll, Paul M('l\oo 0.0.0. JooSnyder l·l.J, Robl.lt
Ha rriSon~. Chur k Pu!llll'i ().{I.(): S t ~W 'l'racey 1·0-2,
Ar1 HuMl'lii·M . 'J'(YI'AUI ti·14-SI.
ByqLIUWn:
lil\1010-32
Al ~ru;
~1\13

"""'"

15-~

•

The Gilbert Lions made their first
appearance in the Wahama New
Years Classic a successful one
Saturday night by capturing a .61Hi2
triumph over the Eastern Eagles In
the championship game of tbe White
Falcons holiday invitational
basketban tournament.
Gilbert took full advantage of a
two minute scoring drought by the
Eagles in the later s\ages of the third
quarter to break open an otherwise
tight hardwood contest. The Uons
outscored Eastern 12-2 to turn a 34-32
lead Into a 46-34 advantage before·
coasting to the victory.
In the consolation matchup the
host White Falcons needed a clutch
181oot jumper by senior guard Mike
Wolfe with :2l&gt; seconds remaining to
edge Wirt County 3~38 in · a low
scoring battle for third place honors
in the four team tournament field.
Award wiMei's in post game
ceremonies went to the Wahama
cheerleadlng corps with first place
honors In the cheerleadlng competition with the · Eastern
cheerleaders placing second. All·
tournament honors were presented
to Randy Cline and Robbie
Browning of Gilbert; Greg LeachDian from Eastern; Matt Thompson
of Wahama and Mike Hughes from
Wirt County.
In ,the tournament finals an out·
manned Eastern team managed to
stay with the Lions through three
and one-half quarters on sheer guts
and hustle before becoming a victim
of unfortunate scoring drought
which Gilbert took full advantage of
to notch the victory.
1
Greg Leactunan, Brian Durst and
Jeff Caldwell combined to offset
Gilberts' one-two scoring punch of
Randy Clin41 and Robbie Browning
during first half action as Eastern
led by one at 17-16 after one period
before falling behind by just three
poinl:! 27·24 at the half.

the field and 14-21 (66.7 percent) .
Both teams had 26 rebounds while
North Gallta commttted 14 turnovers to Hannan Trace's nine.
In the consolation contest, ~dy
Halslop and Jim Jeffers smred 2l
points apiece to pace the Highlanders to their second victory of the
season over the winless Bobcats.
Kyger Creek (0-8) started
quickly. taking a 19-171ead after me advantage
the
The Lionsthrougbout
maintainedmost
theirofslim
period and leading 23-:ll with two third quarter before going on a 12-2
minutes gone In the second quarter.
run late in the canto to take a 46-36
But the Bobcats, who made 12 lead into the final eight minutes.
baskets In the game's nrst 12
Once Gilbert got rolling they were
minutes, made only nine of 30 unstopable as Cline Browning and
attempts the rest of the game and Daniel Harless began to assert their
the Highlanders (2·7) took control.
strength inside. The Uons built a 19
Southwestern led by five,~. at pl 59-40 lead only to have Eastern
the half, and stretc~ed tbe lead to score eight unanswered points to
43-34 after three periods. The close to 59-48 butthat was as close as
Highlanders twl&lt;l' stretched their the Eagles would' get with Gilbert
lead to 16 points In the fourth taking a 69-52 decision.
quarter.
Cline and Browning led all scorers
Riehle Gilmore scored 14 points in the contest with 22 and 21 points
to lead the Bolrats, while Kevin respectively whlle Daniel Harless
Jolley and Tim Gordon· each added 11 markers for the winners.
chi~ In with 10.
Gilbert shot an amazing 79 percent
Kyger Creek outrebounded the from the free throw stripe on 15 of 19
Hlghlanilers, 00-28. BUI Loveday charity tosses.
hauled down 13 for Kyger Creek,
Eastern was paced in scoring by
while Jeffers and Benny Boyd had Leachman with 14 tallies followed by
nine and John Wollum eight for the Brian Durst with 10; Ed Collins with
Highlanders. Kyger Creek turned eig ht and Kevin Barber with seven.
the ball over 23 times to 14 for The Eagles connected on 67 percent
Southwestern.
of1heif'fri!edil'!l'ih oll· six of nine
The Highlanders made 26 of 00 attempts.
field goal attempts (43.3 percent),
In the consolation game Wahama
but were only eight of 20 (40 overcame their second straight subpercent ) from the foul tine. Kyger par shooting night to escape with a
Creek was 21-51 (41.2 percent) from low scoring 3&amp;-311 win over Wirt
the floor and 4-7 from the foullioe. County.
Kyger Creek's Tim Gordon and
The White Falcons managed to
Southwestern's Jim Jeffers were connect on a dismal 14 of 40 field
· named to the all-tournament team, goal attempts for a poor 35 pet. but
along with Hannan Trace's Phil cashed in on a number of Wlrt
Batley and Deke Barnes, and Todd County turnovers to preserve the
Deel and Mike Kemper from North victory.
Gallla . The Pirates' Wayne Diddle
The contest was tied on just two
was chosen Most Valuable Player. occasions at 29-27 and 28-28 with the
ltall M:em~:
Tigers enjoying two brief leads of a '
K\'GER CRPJI',.&amp; (41) - Krvln JoiJ,r:.· ~ 10. Ill\
L.ow:-day 4-1·!'. Ricllk&gt; Gll nur &amp;'l·H. Tim \.a'tkln
single point at 28-27 and 38-37. The
~tO, Mllu&gt; Dradbu·y H -3. 'IVI't\UIII+II.
largest ailvantage experienced by
1 SOU'ItiWfll'ftZN c•J - Andy Ha l510p R-4·:11,
J im Jl.'flm S.2·ID, John Wollum 'lHi, Bmw&amp; Hoyd
the locals was eight points at 1~11
4.0.8. RiCkY HulsiOp 244, 0.\11" Mrnhon 10.2.
and 27-19.
rorAill~ .

WEST VALLEY, Utah (UPI)A slngle·lmgine plane carrying as .
many as. slx people crashed In a
field five miles short of the Salt
Lake Internatkmal Airport Sunday,
'killing all aboard, officials said.
The Cessna 210, which took oH
from Brackett Field In La Verne,
Call!., near Los Angeles, left radar
screens ani! plunged to earth at 1: 55
p.m. as It approached the airport,
said Uoyd Lysengen, a local flight
service supervisor for the Federal
Aviation Administration.
· "Alii knowls.that therewereflve
passengers and at this time they
haven't found any survivors," Salt
Lake International AirPort Operations Manager Tom Rlley said.

Witnesses said they heard the
plane rev Its engines and then there
was a loud pop before It crashed In a .
field.
·
Mike Sutherland said he was on
his way to a friend's house when he
·saw the plane crash. "I seen the
right wing just blow completely
apart from the plane," Sutherland
said. "I watched the pieces fall out
of the air and then I looked back
&lt;Ner and seen It go 'Boom' Into the
gfound."
West Valley Pollee Sgt. Lynn
Hanson quoted wttnessses as sayIng the plane was seen flylilg at
very low altitude IJ!!fore Impact and
the englile was sputtering.
"The Salt Lake City Airport had

them on their radar scrEIIn before
Impact and there was normal radio
communicatiOn with the pilot,"
Hl!nson said. "Then the plane feU
off the radar screen. There was no
emergency broadcast from the
plane before Impact."
He said the victims had rot been
Identified but the pUot's flight plan
Indicated there were five pa:;sengers aboard.
Hanson said It appeared the
passengers were going on a skUng
ex~ltlon. "They had ski boots on
their feet, and there was some ski
equipment In · the plane," the
sergeant said.
Hanson said the FAA and West
Valley pollee were Investigating the
cause of the accident.

Peace agreement an~ounced
'

. Ross opted for a more deliberate
flOor game during the second canto,
handcuffing Southern's effort to
m,alntaln a torrid running match.
The strategy completely turned
things around as now Ross·
SOutheastern moved in as the
dominant force, outscoring the
visitors 20-12. The second frame
yielded a very close l&gt;-28 halftime
score In Southern's favor.
Both team's played nearly even
80t.1111ZRN (SI) - Todd Adarm 5-2·12;
throughout the third round. The Jay
llostlckf-0.8: RlchardGUtnle2~ : £ric
tempo, however, was played to the MU!tron 1.0.2; Dave Amllurg&lt;oy 2-2-li: Sean
tune of a more deliberate pattern ~ Malt Harrill 1-1-3; Ko!ly G""'"" :10-li:
Jamie Hensler ~ Ktnny Turley 4-2-lD:
game, which allowed the once- scon W~klllle ~ Todd Kl!MI ~­
gasping Panthers to gain second rorALtlts-'HI.
RO!IIl IIOUniEA8I'DIN t•l - Mike
wind and focus their sights on a Strasbough
1.0.2; Mark Graves ~ S&lt;ott
comeback victory. Southern, who OR&lt;n j.{)l); Dan Reynolds 0-4-4: Doug Hke
~ 18: J.U Fatrdllld H 16: Dean Cart...
hliil led from the beginning con- 1;2-12.
Todd Atley ~ Mlke Tactc.tt ~
tinued to ,lead, 42-:§l.
K.ev LawMrn ().().(), 'IUI'ALS SM.

.ROCK SPRINGS - Warren
Lpcai captured six of a possible 13
first places on its way to an msy win
in the 10-team Meigs Round Robin
wres tllng tournament here
Saturday.
-Meigs, which finished ninth In the
m~t. were led by Artie Leark and
Robert Sisson, each with a second
Jllace finish. Leark, now 7-2 on the
year. was second In the 1261b. class
while Sisson, now 8-1 for the year,
was ruMer-up In the l:§llb. class.
:.Warren Local easily outscored
second plaoo Philo, 568416. New
Lexington was third with 337,
edging out fourth place NelsonvUieYork with 331. Other team scores
.J11flude Coal Grove 3'!1. Ironton 004,
-'f,imble 281, Gallipolis 200, Meigs
~ . and VInton County 93.
~~arren Local's 112 lb. Brian
~otts was named the touma,-nent's Most Valuable Player as the
..Warrior waltzed through each
:c,pponenl including a win over
;lronton's P. D. Rase In the finals.
• First three places In the 13
;liferent weight classes were as
)Jollows:

MEIG.~

.'\.6.6. Mikf&gt; Chancey 7f..!l. Shlwn Baktr %-4-8. l.ft'

By Gary·ctark

Southern held a slim margin for
the first three minutes of the final
round, but slip~ to a four point
deficit just under the five minute
mark. The hustllng Tornadoes,
despite a good effort, went fiat
&lt;tfenstvely while a new flame
kindled atthe Panther home camp.
Southern never recovered and
slip~ to as much as eleven before
tumbling to a 00-51 defeat.
Hlce, who did not smre the first
period, spearheaded the attack l&gt;r
the winners.
StU! searching for an answer to
the defeat, Coach Caldwell explained, "We played very well the
first half... as well as any highschool
team could play, but then we just
went nat. We lost our Intensity and
never regained lt."
Southern hit 2l of 53 from the floor
and 7 of 10 from the foulllne. The
winners hit 26 or 55 and8 ofll from
the llne.
The winners won the battle of the
boards l&gt;-24. Hlce and Cariee had
10 each and Kenny Turtey ten l&gt;r
Southern.
Ross had five steals, 10 turrovers
and 7 foulll. SHS had 10 steals, 10
turnovers, and lllouls.
Coach Jay Rees little whirlwinds
remained undefeated with a strong
47-41 triumph. Southern was led by
Shannon Riffle with 12 and Dave
McMillan 10. McMillan was 8 l&gt;r 8
from the llne. Mike Tackett had 16
for Ross. Southern's Reserves are
7-0.
Tonight, Southern' travels to
Chillicothe High School to meet
Peebles.
Sou them ....... 18 12 12 9 51
Ross.SE .. .. .. .. 8 2l 10 22 00

...

-...

Gilbert County beats
Eastern, wins toomey

Southeastern tops
Tornadoes, 60-51
BY SCO'IT WOLFE
RICHMONDALE - OvercomIng an 18-8 first period deficit, the
Ross-southeastern Panthers rallied
then scampered on to a convincing
Ill-51 non-league victory over the
visiting Tornadoes Saturday night.
The win boostsRossto7-2&lt;Nerall,
while Sou them suffered Its first klss
at 6-1.
Veteran 6-3 elbow-man Doug
)nee paced a biple-threat attack
With 18 points, while Jeff Fairchild
and 6-4 Dean Carteeadded16andl2
points respectively for the winners.
Todd Adams and Kenny Turley
paced the Southern attack with 12
and ten points respectively, whlle
Jay Bosttck added s.
: From the onset both teams
Ignited strlklngty liberal tempo's
much to Southern's liking as n put
~ Tornadoes In a position to do
lfhat they do best; "run, then run

A11fENS (152) -.Jim Strl!:kland 4..J.ll. P. ,J , Lyons
Hl·S. Mall .Jon:lan f.l ·S. Tim AdiW'Ill ~. Sll'Vt'
Macmmbs 7..0.14, [~'ON DatrtkO 3-tHi 'IUI'AJ.B

11. Guard Jim Strickland came oH 82-61 on Friday night.
more points.
Chris Smith led the LltUe Ma·
the bencb to put In 11 markers.
Meigs held the rebounding edge,
rauders
with 11 points as the 57
'This was the best night we've · 35-30. Baker added seven and Lee
point
guard
played hls finest game
had at working the ball and getting Powell five In addition to Chancey's
everybody Involved In the offense. 17 for Meigs. The winners made 25 of the year. Scott Williams added
The only time we had a problem of 50 from tbe fteld for 50 per cent 10, Bill Bl-ot hers and Mike Bartrum
was In ~ third period when It took and 18 of 32 from the foul line for 56 each had eight, and Robb Harrison
us too long to get In the proper per cent. Athens connected on 23 d and Don Dorst had six apiece.
offense against their 1-3-1 trap.
55 from the field for 42 per cent and ·Jerry Jones and corr-Y Carrigan led
Athens handled our pressure much slx of 13 from the foul line for 46 per Athens with eight each.
Coach Mlck Childs' Meigs rebetter this time than the first game cent.
(Meigs won 93-59). When Athens
Meigs had 13 turnovers and serves, now 8-1 overall, built a ~6
plays well, 'they're a pretty' good Athens 12. Meigs committed 13 . first period lead and were never In
ball club,' commented Drummer.
trouble after that.
fouls and Athens 24.
Meigs travels to Wellston next
While Meigs goes to !).() overall
Meigs' reserves were,lmpresslve
and -remains 7-0 In theTVC,Athens In the preliminary game with a Friday while Athens hosts Marietta
falls to 54 and ls 1-11n the SEOAL. 5GJ2 thumping over the Athens . the same night.
The Bulldogs had beaten Alexander reserves as slx players scored six or

Waharna gained .the early lead
with J elf Bamitz scoring the first ~lx
points for the White Falcons enroute
to a 10-6 first period edge. Th~
second stanza was also plow scoring
quarter with. WHS scoring nine
points in the ·eight' minutes before
intermission on one field goal anq
eight free throws. Waharna led _by a
1!1-13 margin at the half.
Richie Clark scored six of the bend
a rea teams eight third period tallies
but Wirt County cut the deficit to a
bucket at 27·25 by the quarters end to
set the stage for the exciting finish,
Following 28-28 tie with 6:45.
remaining Wahama gained a foUJI
point 34-28 bulge only to have the
Tigers fight back to take a 38-37leaq
with 1:25 to play. Wahama got a
clutch 18 foot jump shot from Mike
Wolfe at the :25 second mark to give
the White Falcons a 39-38 advantage,
Wirt County committed a costly
turnover with Todd Gress coming up
with the steal with :04 seconds to
play. Gress was Intentionally fouled
and a technical foul was assessed a
Tiger player which gave \Vahama
three attempts from the free throw
stripe and the ball following the
charity tosses.
Wahama missed all three tries
from the line and on the lnboundS
pass Cark was fouled with :02
seconds remaining. Following
another missed free throw Wirt tried
a full court shot which carne up short
and Wahama esca~ with the 39-38
win.
The White Falcons were led In
scaling by Jeff Barnltz with nine
points followed by Matt Thomp6011
with eight and Richie Clark with
seven. The bend area team also had
its problems from the charity stripe
as it did from the floor with the
locals converting just .U of 24 free
throws for a poor 46 percenl
Wlrt County received a 1~ polnt
performance from Mitch Hughes
while Toby Nichols added nine and
Kevin Sees seven.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP!) Rival militia leaders Sunday unveiled details of a peace agreement
to end a decade of civil war by
placing Lebanon firmly In Syrian
hands and gradually giving more
power to the nation's Moslem
majority.
· Christian and Moslem militiamen, however, continued to exchange fire along tbe so- called
Green Line dividing Christian east
Beirut from the mostly Moslem
west, whnesses said.
In Damascus, Elle Hobelka, head
of the Christian Lebanse Forces
militia, Shiite Moslem Arruil mUitta
' chief Nablh Berri and Druze mUtUa
leader Walld Juinblatt, met separ~tely with Syrian President Hafez
Assad, before revealmg details of
the peace accord, state-run Damascus radio said.
The three IT)en, leaders of
Lebanon's most powerful militias,
Saturday signed the accord worked
out In three months of talks In the
Syrian capital.
The final text of the agreement
called for an "Immediate and
comprehensive cease-fire with Syria's help'.' with several jl'leasures
taken to end the state of ciYll war
that has cost ·some 100,000 lives

since 1975.
The accord - the first reached
between the fighters themselves,
despite a string of cease-Ore calls
from political leaders - called for
"total coordlnaUon" in foreign
pollcy with Syria and the use of Its
ll'OOps to prevent Israeli forces
from . using Lebanon to attack
Syria.
The agreement reflected Syria's
success In Increasing Its role as
regional power broker. Syria has
about 35,000 troops 1n northern and
eastern Lebanon.
"We're a real Syrtan satellite
state now," said one seasoned
Lebanese commentator.
But the accord said a 1948
armistice With Israel will remain In
effect- a point apparently won by
the Christian mUitla.
Tbe23-pagedocumentalsocalled
for the deployment of Syrian forces
ln parts of Lebanon and the
disbanding of mUitlas.
The army will be returned to Its
barracks, where It will he re-bullf
with Syrian assistance, and the
para-mllltary Internal Security
Forces will be strengthened, the
document said. The army disintergrated In February 1984.
The agreement called for the

Immediate formation of a new
enlarged Cabinet, expected to
number between 22 and 26
members, that will appoint an
Increased number of parliamentartans. The new parliament will have
198 rrembers - rather than the 99
In the present legislature.
The new parliament wm · be
divided equally between Lebanon's
ChrIst Ian an d MosIe m
communities.
The present parliament, elected
In 197'2, Is weighted 6 to 51n favor of
the Chrjsttans In Une with Lebanon's42-year-Qid system of asslgolng
political posts on religious grounds.
The agreement also reduces the
powers of Christian Presklent
Amln Gemayel, who has said he
supports the accord.
The agreement, however, set the
length of a so-called "transitional
period" for the Implementation of
the political reforms at 10 years.
News of the accord brought swift
opposition from former Chrlstlan
President Camille Chamoun who
said he wanted cooperation with
Syria based on equal terms.
Veteran Christian politicians who
ar also opponents of Hobelka have
vowed to thwart the mUitla agreement by blocking It In parliament.

Israel-rejects U.S • .restraint appeal
• JERUSALEM (UPI) - Israel
has rejected a U.S. appeal for
restraint In avenging attacks on El
Al airlines In Rome and VIenna and
vowed to do "what we consider to )le
vital to·our Interests" In combating

Washington. We will do what we
consider to be vital to our Interests
In this prolonged war against
terrorism," Rabin said.
Presldettt Reagan Friday sent a
note of condolences · to Prime
Minister Shimon Peres condemnterrorism.
Israeli Defense Minister Yttzhak Ing the attacks and calling for the
Rabin ·!Did NBC television Sunday . perpetrators to be brought to
all evidence pointed to the renegade justice.
But Reagan cautioned Israel
Abu Nidal faction of the Palestioe
Liberation Organization. At least 18 against a heavy-handed retallatlon,
people died, and 105 were wounded saying, "We must not enable the
terrorists to cjeter us from pursuing
In tbe attacks Friday.
"We have had the message from . our great goal of achieving lasting

peace."

Rabin earlier told American
Jewish tundratsers In Jerusalem
that Israel "should InDict the
maximum .damage on those who
are the leaders of terror organlza·
lions, those who organize and those
who carry out terrorism."
Israeli warplanes raided the
Tunisian headquarters of the Palestinian LiberatiOn Organization Oct.
1 to avenge the murder 'of three
Israelis by Palestinians In Cyprus.

031 IACKSON PII&lt;E · RtQ5 -wt:ST

---4524

..... .,._

Hois..tn ~2&lt; 12, Todd [)x&gt;l ji.().J2, W ay~ Dldltfo2·S.9,
Paul LA.'l' f.1·10. TOTAL8 fl. I....
Httn~

Trace

Nmh r•llll

il 12 12 23-56
I&amp; 17 11 18-62

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money
\

j300,000 carryover expected ·
'
1

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

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
(4LL (614) 992·2104
(304) 675-1244
,.

au.thorltles said. LutlmWa Kondratjeva. 38, ol San
Monica. was found In the rear seat ol her ltrlll
Volkswagen Sirocco. Part of her body was protruding
out a back window. UPL

LANCASTER. Ohio (UP!) City officials say they expect
m.roo from 191fi funds to be
carried over Into the new year and
may prevent the layoff of six
members of the safety forces who
had been told they would be laid off
In January.
"We're hoplngtbe carry-overwut
save these jobs," said Tim Hines
chairman cit he city council finance
committee. "We've been working
with the mayor and the auditor to
work something out. We'll have to
walt for the year to end before
having exact figures."
A projected $8XI,OOl deficit In the
general fund In 1986 had forced the

city to consider laying oH 26
employees. If Hines's figures are
correct, only six firefighters and
five pollee officers wUI be furloughed after the city's new council
approves tbe budget at Its first
January session. Seven parks
employees and two cemetery
workers tire also under consldera·
tlon for layoffs.

ai:U
II tHE

NlS}

to 15 percent of the market by the
end of 19ffi.
Block said although competition
Is working, many people are
unhappy and contused.
"A substantial portion of consumers really liked the old one-stop
shopping," he said. "They could go
to the phone company for their
equipment for their local service.
They knew who to complain to.
Those consumers are not all that
wUd about the changes ."
Ivan Seidenberg, spokesman for
NYNEX, the Bell operating company serving New York and New
England, said, "The truth of the
matter lslt (the new phone system)
defies common sense. It really
does.

"Divestiture ... produced a system that, for people, sometimes
doesn't make sense. You call the
local telephone company and they
in tum have to direct you to two,
three, four other places to take care
of your total package."
The government, In an effort to
guard against anti-competitive
practices, limits the amount of
advice a local phone company can
give a customer about such things
as telephone equipment.

me'

William Sprague, Dec. Emily
Sprague, Affld., Mldd. Vlll.
Trudy Roush to Truman D. Hall,
\SA F12 T2 Rl3, Salisbury.

YEAR END CLEARANCE SALE
MONDAY, DEC. 30 THIU SATURDAY, JAN. 4

Thl• Week Only
ALL DRESSES ..................~. 30°/o Off

found In the back of the car even was discovered by flsherm~ .
though she apparently was the shortly after 7 a.m. Saturday.
driver.
Kondratjeva. who was an athlete
Lt. Chuck Bradley said detec- In the Soviet Union before coming to
lives do not know whether the the United States, was one of eight
position of tbe body "was the result Soviet emigres who testified In
of the crash or a murder."
Miller's trial.
An autopsy was scheduled for
Kondratjeva testified Ihat admit·
today.
ted Soviet spy Svetlana Ogorodnlk,
Government sources famUiar ova and Miller were her guests at II
with Kondrat)eva 's role In the dinner party she held at her
Muter trial told tbe 'Los Angeles aparlment. She said Ogorodnlkova
Times they believed her death was Introduced the FBI agent as a
rot coMected to the case.
"business associate."
"She wasn't a major figure In this
Kondrat jeva's test !mollY was
case at all," a high-ranking official used by the government to support ·
In the Intelligence community told
their claims that Miller, the only
the newspaper. "If somebody " FBI agent ever charged wlih
wanted to send some kind of espionage. and Ogorodnlkova car·
message to the Russian emigre rled on a clandestine relationship.:
community, they would have
Ogorodnlkova and her husband
looked for somebody who was more pleaded guilty to espionage charges
Important."
In a separate trial.
Fosselman said the roof of the
Miller's trial ended with a hung
1970 Volkswagen Dasher was jury last November. A second trial
crushed when the car fell 25 feet on the espionage charges Is tenta·
from the highway and landed at the tlvely scheduled to begin In Februedge of the water. The wreckage ary.

.--=--------------------LETS GET ACQUAINTED
BELPRE AQUARIUM
&amp;.PET SHOP
0

HECK'S/KIOGER SHOPPING CENTER
WASHINGTON BLVD., BELPRE, OHIO

423-9509

Over 180 Tanks of Tropical, Salt
and Gold Fish
Complete Aquarium Supplies

ALL OXFORD BLOUSE$ ...............51 0
OPEN 9:30·6 MON.·SAT.
9:30-12 THUR.- CLOSED NEW YEAR'S DAY:

SANDY'S
BOUTIQUE
320 N. Stc011d St. .
lhldltport, Ohio
YISA-IUSTIICHAIGI-LAYAWAY

BRING THIS AD IN AND SAVE 10%
ON 1st VISIT
\

I

"We have to do better at
educating the customers, and the
government has to have less
regu Ia tlon so we can do a better job
of serving the customers overall,"
Seidenberg said.
"The federal government, which
has done this to us, has not spent
penny on public education," noted
Sam Simon, president of the
Telephone Research and ActiOn'
Committee. He said Americans are
"telephone babies" who need to
learn the "Ins and outs of
competition."
Expressing alarm at local phone
bills, which some o!ftclals expect ta
rtse by as much as 50 per&lt;l'nt over
the next few years, Simon said a
cap should he put on local rates. Td
offset the cost of the cap, he said,
phone companies should be allowed
make money by getting Into neW.
areas of business.
·
McGowan blamed AT&amp;T for at
least part of the consumer conlu:
slon, blasting the company for a
recently sending 117,00l notices to
Individuals thanking tlo&gt;m lor
signing up with AT&amp;T when they
had not done so.
·
The fact "They don't want AT&amp;T
to be allowed to compete back."

Fo.ul play suspected in crash
which killed major witness

'

19 II 4 12 - t6
17 I~ R 17 - 60

HANNAN TIU.CE (M)- Phil Bull-)~ ~ 10, Df«t&gt;
Barl'l'S ].4.1(1, ~IIIl Col~ 7 ·~ 1 9 , Sll'Vl' JM rrell2-64,
Sallt Rankin 1.0.2, Rldwrd Sllt t 1 ·~7 . Tri!Yor Small
~ . TOTAl.&amp; tlol4-ll.
NOR1H G.UJJA (ft) - Mllrl&lt;cmper&amp;.7·1" Todd

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Telephone company oHiclals concede
that the average American Is
baffled by a post· divestiture
marketplace that "defies common
sense," but predict consumers wDI
benefit from competition.
"We'll look back 10 years from
now or 12 years from now and say
(the breakup of the Bell system)
was the right thing to do," Edward
Block, senior vice president of the
American Telephone &amp; Telegraph
Co., said Sunday on CBS News'
"Face tbe Natkm."
Although local lJhone rates may
have Increased an average 35
percent nationwide since the 1984
divestiture, William McGowan,
chairman of MCl Communications
Corp., said long- distance rates will
continue to drop.
He pointed out since the advent of
"equal access,'' with more and
more customers able to choose
their long-distance service, AT&amp;T's
rates have dropped 9 percent and
MCJ's charges are 12 percent
lower.
"We think that trend will continue," he said, also predicting that
MCI, the No. 2Iong-distance phone
company, would control10 percent

Richard H. Boring, Inez C.
Boring to Richard H. Boring, Inez
C. Boring, 1A S8 T4 Rll, Olive.
Marvin L. Keebaugh, Marjorie J ·
Keebaugh, Theodore Abolln, Olney
Claire Abolln to Verne A. Ord,
Correctlve Deed, Orange.
Verne A. Ord to Opal J. Kauff,
1.0000 F.32 T-4 R-12, Orange
Carl L. Tennant, Rhonda J.
Tennant to Riverboat IM,Inc., Pt.
Lot 117, Mldd. Vllt.

_.,._
SO!J!IIW(IIM'rm

Bell breakup still baffling

Property transfers

. WITNiliS KILLED - A wltne88 In the espionage
, clllle against FBI agel\l Richard MUier was found
• dead Sunday In the wreckatle ol a mr that piWiged ofl
: Paclllc Coast JUI!ftway Into the surf near MaUbu,

short of the Salt Lake International J\lrport, ldlliDg all ,
six aboard. UP!.

PROBE CRASH - FAA tllld state Medical
examiner oftlclals lnvestlgale the wreckage of a
single elaglne plane that crashed about five miles

MALffiU, Calif. (UP!)- Pollee
say foul play may have been
Involved In the traffic accident that
killed a Soviet emigre who testified
In the espionage trial of Richard
Miller, the only FBI agent ever
charged with spying.
The body of Ludmilla Kondratjeva, 38, of Santa Monica, was
found Saturday hanging out a back
wlndowofacarthatplungedoffthe
Pacific Coast Highway Into the surf
25 feet below at MalibU, sheriff's
deputies said.
Deputy Pete Fosselman said
Sunday Kondratjeva's death Is
being Investigated as a possible
homicide because her body was

fjr~~~~~~~,i

KYR«' Cr('('k

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

�.

,.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

~hild

Page-6-

Katl!ryn Miller, two. It was noted
that 12 fruit baskets were made and
distributed In the community.
Jane Harris read tre legend of the
Chrisbnas Dower. Games were
conducted by Dorothy Smith and
Marcia Arnold. Gift wrappings
were judged with the winners being
Mrs. Arnold and Peggy ~oore.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Grueser assisted ln serving by
Jane Harris who was a guest along
with her daughter, Sarah.

Anderson
birth is announced
.

Community corner
By CHARLENE HOEfUCH

Chestef Council meets

TV world

'fast Eddie,' mayor of New York

.

Calendar/happenings

;

TUJ!SDAY
Q!ESHIRE - Watch service
'fllesday. 7:JI p.m., Silver Run
Biptlst Church.

i

I

: EAGLE RIDGE - Eagle
eJdge Community Church will
IIOld New Year's Eve watch night
!emces at 8 p.m. Tuesday.
!jpeclal music wlU be presented
trY the McDaniel Tl1&gt; with Jerry
IIIII Diana Fredrick.
'

•

-

• BURLINGHAM- A New Year
watchnlght serVtce wlU be held at
ihe Burlingham Community
¢burch beginning at 7 p.m. Tues'
Harry Wrtngler wlU be the
IIPI!aker and special music wiD be
jlmellted by Saved and the Old

4-Y·

y

Time Religious Singers.
LETART- The final meeting for
1985 wlll be held bY the Letart
Township Board of Trustees at 10
a.m., Dec. 31, at the Letart Town
Hall.
RUTLAND - Two special sessions have been set by the Ollve
Township Board of Trustees. The
Hrst will be held at 6:30 p.m. on
Dec. 31 to llrlish 19!fi business. The
second wUI be an organizational
session at 10 a.m. on Jan. 1. Both
meetings wUI be held at the Rutland
Fire StatiOn.

New Year's party
RACINE- A New Year's party
will be held Tuesday at the
American Legion Hall In Racine.
There will be round and square
dancing from 9to 11 p.m., music by
the Circle D band. The public Is
Invited . .

Scenic JDIIs Nursing Care Center and Plncrest Nurtng Home. The
school Is localed at GalllpoUs, and the band Is directed by Rulh
Williams.

PERFORMING FOR EIDERLY - Members of the 0b1o Valley
Chrlsllaa School concert baud perfonned during the oolklll.v at

'l'lmes-Senlln'el stall
The joys of tre hollday season are
many.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Anderson. kesville, and the paternal greand- , family mernbe1rs,
RUtland. are announcing tre birth parent are Mr. and Mrs. Thomas reuniting of
Ot 'their first child, a daughter. Anderson. Rutland.
friends, sharing
Rita LaudermUt of Rutland is a
Jessica Nlcoel, born at Point
of gilts and lam·
J;'leisaut, W. Va. on Dec. 16: The maternal great-grandmother, and Uy act!v!tles are
Infant weighed seven pounds, four Lovena Neal, Middleport Is a all particularly
ciuuces and was 21 Inches long. maternal great-great - special at this
Maternal grandparents are Mr., grandmother.
time ot the year.
~ Mrs. Larry Laudermllt, WUAnd while you may be worn to a
frazzle, and broke to boot, there's
nothing Uke having the family
home for the holidays. AU the
:Olrlstmas readings, carol slng- p"eSeelt at the last meeting. A cooking, confusion, and even conIIW and tre exchange ri gilts Christmas card was read from tention of the occasion are worth Ire
tiiiDwed a oollday dinner attended Zana Gainer,' a member, Uvlng in effort as the scene Is set for the
Hebron. Mrs. Bissell thanked the family to be together.
by ~ members of Chester Council
Here for the holidays with Mr.
323, Daughters of Amertca at the past rouncUors club for remembrances
at
tre
death
of
her
and
Mrs. Don Anderson, Barbie,
baD.
and
Mrs.
Ritchie
thanked
daughter,
and David, Pomeroy, are
Sarah
7rhe dinner was served at decotoose
woo
prepared
tre
dinner.
Maureen
Hennessy and Joseph
rated tables by the kitchen committe following a 'blessing by Ada Betty Roush. deputy state counci- Wilson and their children, Angela
Morris. Favors were candy canes. lor, gave a welcome to those and Jonathan, who have been llvlng
The progn.m was conducted by the attending, and Mrs. Smith reported In San Antonio, Texas, but are In the
011 tbe 17 members rl. Chester
process of moving to Florida;
Gjxxl of the Order committee with
Council
woo
attended
the
Guiding
Patrtcia Hennessy and her bUS·
Dlrl&amp; Grueser, chairman. Poems
lllctuded "What a Grandmother Is" Star Council's annual Inspection at band, Woodrow Cosey, Los An·
bY Helfn Wolf; "My Christmas" by . Carleton School Syracuse. Five geles, Call!., and Mrs. Phyllis
candidates were Initiated and one Hennessy, Winter Springs, Fla.
Margaret Tuttle; "Christmas Is
Missing from the family group was
Fun for AD" by_Enna Cleland; and member was reinstated.
It
was
noted
that
the
looks
will
be
Mary Kay Hennessy and her
"A'Song at Christmas" by Dorothy
audited at the home of Erma family, which incidentally Includes
1\ltchle.
· Each member told about their Cleland on Jan. 2 at 1 p.m. Mary K. a new baby. who Uve In Denver.
Randy ·and Lori Rupe Lee of
favorite toy as a child. Carols were Holter reported oo the trophy won
by
tre
CouncU
for
the
Christmas
Linden,
Tenn. are spending the
sung with Mrs. Wolf at the plano. A
In
Pomeroy.
The
parade
entry
holidays
here with her parents,
gjft exchange was held around the
trophy
given
by
the
Pomeroy
Richard and Ann Rupe, Pomeroy.
'lJahted tree, and there was also an
oiamrer of Commerce was Adding lots of exci)ement to the
eicchanlll! r1. Christmas cards.
Rupe family Christmas gathering
Estber Smith, recording secre- displayed.
Attending
besides
those
named
were
Radley, four. and twins, Cacy
~. reed two communications,
were
Mary
Hayes,
Ruth
Smith,
and
Cody,
)7 months old, children d
one a Chr!slmas message from
Docothy Ritchie. state councilor, Opal Hollon, Laura Mae Nice, Linda and Chuck Faulk.
woo reminded members rl the Goldie Frederick, Iva Powell,
s~Ptnnance of tre season, called Catlw Pullins, Ethel Orr, Sandra
t!lein to remember tre lU and White, Thelma White, Mary K.
elderly members, and to live by the Holter, Elizabeth Hayes, Zelda
cpll!d r1 tre Daughters r1. America. Weber. Faye Kirkhart. Inzy Ne•.19 Ann Baum, vice councilor. well, Lora Damewood, Octa Ward,
NEW YORK (UP!)- A husband
pi-eslded at the meeting during Eva Robson, Eileen Martin, Harlan and wife who have ~n forcibly
wldch tilne tre deaths r1. Violet Ballard. Alta Ballard. Mae separated for 10 years are tre
Smith, daughter of Ada Bissell, the McPeek. Leona Hensley, Paullne · "Intimate Strangers" of a new CBS
tritber of Everett Grant. and the Ridenour, Marcia Keller, Shirley movie starring Stacy Keach and
liJ&amp;! of Charlotte Grant were Beegle, Cora Beegle, Sadie Trus- Terl Carr.
sell, Betty Denny, LIUlan DemosWhat happens when they get
rtJted.
• ~ty Roush, deputy statecoucnl- key, Nelle Werner, and Todd back together Is the story of this
Bissell.
~ •.. conductEd the nomination and
sometimes moving, sometimes Irri. e!ec'tlon rl the 1!9i officers not
tating and always well-acted
drama to air on Jan. 1. !l-11 p.m.
Eastern tlme.
"lntlmate Strangers" opens on
the
last day of the American
means
Koch
wlll
ship
\l"O
corned
l NEW YORK (UP!) - In the
presence
In Vietnam, a day of vast
World of high-steaks rettlng be- bee! sandwiches ID Boston Mayor
tWeen America's mayors, Edward Raymond Flynn In dme for lunch chaos. fear and confusion. Keach. a
surgeon, Is pulling some chunks of
Tuesday.
~h thinks he Is doing just tine.
1The mayor had a pair of bets But Sunday the Giants made up hardware from a badly wounded
young man, assisted by his nurse... ring tre weekend on National
for
that.
They
defeated
San
Franwife, Carr. They barely have time
P.ootbaU League playofis games
cisco
Mayor
Dianne
Feinstein's
to catch t~ last evacuation helicopk.Yolvlng the New York Jets and
Giants. He lost one, won another, 49ers, 17-3, forcing Feinstein ID pay ters out of Saigon.
As things turn out, he Is forced to
then proclaimed himself the overall up with 10 steak dinners.
"If every weekend I could drop a leave alone - unable to find out
victor.
corned beef sandwich and win 10 what happened to his wife.
• The New England Patriot's 7&amp;14 steaks I'd be doing pretty good,"
The fUm flips ahead 10 years to
drubbing of tre Jets Saturday Koch quipped.
1985 - Keach has become an
affluent Florida doctor,llvlngon his

MONDAY
: BEDFORD- Bedford Township
Trilstees will meet for their final
session of trey,e ar at 7p.m. Monday
at the town hall.

By United Preas Interilational
Three pedes~sanda snowmobile operator were among 11 people
idlled in accidents on Ohio toadways during the weekend, the State
Highway Patrol reported today.
There were,five deaths Sunday.
four Saturday and two Friday
night, a Jl!)trol spokeswoman said.
The vlctlms died In 10 accidents.
The patrol counts trafOcfatalltles
resulting from accidents on Ohio's
public roads each weekend between
6 p.m. Frilay and midnight
Sunday.

Margaret E. Goett

who is ill. Gift wrappings were
judged wlth Peggy Houdashelt
wlnnlng the prize for the prettiest
package, and Peggy Harris the
plize for the most ortglnal Patty
Duffy was a guest for the dinner.

.

Coming ·home for the holiday
Joining Erma Smitl! and Genevieve Meinhart for a pre-holiday
visit were Mr. and Mrs. Jack Smith
of Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Smith, Challllcey, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Claxton, daughter, Rene,
Athens.
Everybody made lt home for a
Chrlslmas gathertng and gift exchange wlth Mr. and Mrs. ·Jack
Bechtle. In for the ho~ays were
Mr. and Mrs John A. Bechtle and
daughter, Debbie, Mary Ann Davis
and daughter, Lacey, all of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Russell Klontz
and children, Peter and Erica,
Bremen, and Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Bechtle and. son, David, and Jane
Gilkey and son. Chris, Middleport.
Entertaining will! a family gathering on Christmas Day at their
home were Mr. and Mrs. Robtirt
Ritchie and son, Robert Jr. Their
gueats Included Mrs. Betty
Spencer, Pomeroy; Mrs. W.V.
Bearhs, Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Jess
Wood and son, Scott, Belpre, and
Mr. and Mrs. · Steve Morris and
Rachael, Rutland.
Bob and Katie Crow had Christmas early at their home with hotl!
sons and their families attending.
Then on Christmas Day they went
to the home of Pam and Jim Crow
and children, Meredith, Wes, and
Canie lor a visit before going oo to
Zanesville to spent several days
with Bob and Cheryl Crow and
children, Robby and Lori.
The Donald Mora family, all
home for the holidays, enjoyed the
occasion In the Mora's new home.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Slawler, Amy
and Usa, of Bangor, Maine, Mark
Mora of South Carolina, Mary

Mora, Sally and Gary Gibson and
Bryan Ingels, Athens, Davld and
Ay Mora, and Mae Mora, Pomeroy,
completed the family circle lor the
observance d. Christmas.
Joining Juanlt;l Bachtel and
Carol TannehlU lor Christmas were
Mark and Becky Tannehill. April
and Brian, Newark, and Dr. and
Mrs. Carl Peterson, Cryst;ll and
Carson, Columbus. Becky remained for several days to visit ·
trtends here.
Mike and Marie Wayland have
returned to Homestead, Fla. after a
holiday visit here wlth their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Legar,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Wayland, Middleport.
Mark and Jennifer Mitch, Stevensyllle, Mich. spent Christmas
here with his parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Mitch.
A pre-oollday celebration at the
IDme of Mr. and Mrs. Elza Gilmore
marked not only Chrlsdtmas but
the 40th wedding anniversary otthe
GUmores and tre birthdays of Rick
Gilmore and Louise GUmlire. AU of
tre familY except Joe and Linda
Gilmore and tl1eir four chldren,
Shanon, Kasey, Robin and Barry of
Walworth, Wise. were at the dinner
party. Attending were Rick and
Debbie Gilmore, Reedsville, Mary
and Roger Gilmore, Athens, Mike
and i:lebliie Gilmore and chldren,
Brandee, BrlaMa and Justin,
Rutland, Louise Gilmore and Marjorie Kapple, Pomeroy.
Christmas Eve dinner guests of ·
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeftlch and·
daughter, Jayne, Columbus, were
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Shuster,
Lincoln Heights. Joining the Hoe-

tllchs for dinner on Christmas Day
were Mr. and Mrs. James Dishong, '·
Athens.
Ev~one was home for tl!e
holidays wlth George and PhyUls
Hackett, Middleport. this year.
Here for the traditional family
gathering were Drs. FWse Marte
and Blll Lilly, Mt. Sterling, Ky.; BUI
Hackett, Columbus, and sons, B. J . '
and Benjamin. West Liberty; Linda ·
and John Goodwin and oon, Kyle,
West Palm Beach, Fla.; Dennis
and Sue Hackett, Columbus, and :
Dr. FWrert and Mrs. Melanie :
Franko, Scottsdale, Arizona.
Spending Christmas with Manning and June Kloes, Middleport, '
were their daughter, Lori Kloes, :
Lancaster, another daughter and
son-In-law, Lynn and Duane .An- '
drews, Nelsonville, and their son
and his family, Kent and Beth Kloes
and daughter, Amanda, Belpre.
Mrs. Paul Smart. Columbus joined
both the Hackett and Kloes famllleli
for family observances over .
Christmas.
Mr. imd Mrs. Jack Smith. Joshua
and Joey, New Matamoras, spent
Chrisbnas wlth rer parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Nease and son. Dan.
They were joined for dinner by Mr.
and Mrs. Steven Nease.
Jolnbig BUI and Louise Radford
for Chrlsbnas dinner at the Homer .
Radford borne where trey now
reslde were their children and
famllles, Mary and Roger Gilmore,
Athens; Bill Radford. Worthington,
and daughter, Brooke, Bethesda;
Becky and Lasrry Romine, and ,
Mrs. Grace Glaze, Pomeroy. The .
family gathered at the Romine
oome ori Christmas Eve.

Keach, Garr are 'Intimate Strangers'
yacht and in partnership will! his
ldd brother In a medical practice
that specializes In tennis elbow,
sunburn and rich people. He also
has a rich and beautiful .blond
glrUrlend, played by Cat!w L€e
Crosby.
Suddenly, his wife reappears,
with a small and adorable VIetnamese hoy named George holding
her tightly by the hand.
.
The army brings them together
In Washington and tl!ey embrace
lovingly, delighted to be reunited,
happy to find they stU! In love each
other, but...
For 10 years he has learned to llye
wlthout her, developed a whole new
lifestyle, gone on with his Ufe haltingly at first, but eventually
adapting to his loss.
And for 10 years she has lived In a
cage in a prison camp near Hanoi,
mistreated, tortured and tenibly
alone. For her. Ute stood stW.
Garr, Keach and the Utile boy,
with whom sre escaped from the
prison camp, settle In to Ute a hoard

his ship - except sre dlsllkes her
busb&amp;nd's type d. medical !l'actlce,
Is unable to have a normal
husband-wife sex relationship and
sleeps with a knife under her JiUow.
She also has Oashbacks, where
sre relives her awful past.
Max Gall plays a psychiatrist
who trtes ID help, and she makes an
attempt to build a lite of rer own by
working wlth a doctor (Priscilla
Lopez) In a free clinic. That's the
Dip side of the kind of medical
practice her husband has sold out
his !deals ID run.
The Initial oour of "Intimate
Strangers " Is real fivehandkerchief drama. It Is lump-Inthe- tbroat time when Garr arrtves
m Guam after her Imprisonment
and for the first time In 10 years
sees an American nag. The couple's reunion Is moving, as is a news
conference she ooids, trying to
underplay her ordeal.
In the second oour, however, the
script starts to unravel. Keach is too
understanding oo the ooe hand and

too shallow In &amp;ll his values on the

other. Carr Is lrrltatlngly selfrighteous and unaware of rer
husband's feelings. ~e may not be
the hero she hoped for. but he is a
decent man. And , heavens knows,
retries.
"Intimate Strangers" poses a
very real question - if two people
go out •of each other's Uves for 10
years, can they pick up tre Jieces,
relate to each other, somehow come
rogetrer again. The realistic
answer the drama gives Is maybe.
Walter Cronkite will again host a
New Year's Day broadcast from
Austria featuring tre VIenna Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by
Lorin Maazel. The show, "From
VIenna: The New Year's Celebration 1986," wlll air on PBS Jan. 1,
2: :lJ-4 p.m. and 9- 10:30 p.m.
Eastern time, and In many cities
will be stereo simulcast on FM
radio (check localllstlngsl .

------People in the news-----.. . .
By ELLI! E. CONKUN
United Press International
OH JOHNNY, OH JOHNNY, OH JOHNNY OH: Clark County
(Las Vegas) Commission Chairwoman 'lballa Dmdero has written
to Johnll)' CIU'fiOn to protest a recEnt Joke he rold about Nevada
women on the Ton~ht Show.
She said she was disappointed wlth his comments aoout the
character of Nevada women and requested equal time to enlighten
him on tlle good character and achievements d. women In the state.
Carson, who was telling jokes about several states asked: "Do you
know the dlfierence between a parrot and a woman frOm Nevada?
Answer: You can teach a parrot ID say 'no."'
Dondero countered: "Las Vegas has been good to Johnny Carson.
His performances here were well-received and his business ventures
quite successful, I would Imagine. This slap In the face ID Nevada alld
Its women on national television Isn't funny ID those rl us woo have
raised our families here and worked hard to malle Las Vegas a good
place to live." She says she has received no reply,ao tar from Carson.
BUFFALOED IN BUFFALO: The Buffalo BU!s finished 1985- a
miracle In Itself - with a hopelessly hApless 2·145 record, tying
Tampa Bay for tlle tr.glorlous loser of the year honor. And there's
nothing like 28 losses In two years to Butfalo the old ega. BUis' nose
tackle Fred Smerlllll probably sununed It up best when he said, "I'd
Uke to go to a hypnotist·ro forget the whole year."

PEOPLE'S SKINNY PEOPLE: The January 6 Issue of People

'I

The Daily Sentinel

. Marg&lt;lfet Ellzabetl! Goett, T/,197
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, died
Saturday night at the Veterans
Memortal Hospital Extended Care
Unit.
A homemaker, Mrs. Goett was
horn Nov. 26, 1900 In Pomeroy, a
daughter of the late Charles and
Catherine Rappold Schorn.
She was a member r1. tre Sacred
Heart Church In Pomero\1.
Surviving are a son, Charles
Slack, Massillon; two sisters, Marie
Robinson and Mildred Morris, both
of Pomeroy; two grandsons, Charles Slack, Jr., Akron, and Joel
Slack,-Atlanta, Ga.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her first
husband, Harley Slack In 1m.
Services wUI be held at 10 a.m.
Tuesday at the Sacred Heart
Church with Monsignor Antoony
Glannamore olflciattng. Burial will
be In Sacred Heart Cemetery.
Friends .may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home from 6 to 9 this
evening. Rosary services will be
held at 7:30 this evening at the
funeral home.

John L. Weber

FriUy night

Grace C. Sayre

He is survived by his wife, Katy
Thomas Weber; two sons: Tom,
Gahanna and David, of Chllllcothe;
three granddaughters; one niect&gt;
and one nephew. One sister,
Katherine Stevens, preceded him In .
death.
Funeral services are 1 p.m.
Tuesday at the Jenkins Fumeral
Home with Rev. McClelland R.
Nicholson and Father John Swick·
ard officiating.
.
Burtal wlll be In Ridgewood
Cemetery, Wellston.
Friends may caD from 2-4 and 7-9
Monday and on Tuesday until the
hour of the service.
Graveside military rites wUI he
conducted by American Legion
Post 371.

(Continued from page 1)
"Over the past four years The
Western Reserve Telephone Co.
has Invested over $T.! million In
service Improvements." Hindman
said.
Approximately $15.3 million additional expenditures are planned for
198i.
•
"We must stay abreast of
changing technology In order to
provide the services that our
customers need today and prepare
lor tre .services that they will
requtre In the near tu lure," Hind- ·
man stated.
"We have delayed the need for a
rate Increase through the lmple·
mentation of more effl~lent switchIng, repair and bu!llness office
systems and the overall productivIty of our employees," he reports.
The Western Reserve Telephone
Co.' has Increased Its employee
productivity In the past three years.
It employs a smaller work force
than In 1982 but provides service to
10 percent more cusklmer access
lines.
In addition to the local service
rate Increase, the company plans to
ask permission ID withdraw fourparty service toexlstlngcusromers.
Also, two-party service will no
longer be offered to new customers,
while present two-party users wUI
be allowed to continue tre service.
The Western Reserve Telephone
Co. serves over 105,000 access lines
In Northeastern and Southern Ohio
and is part of the ALLTEL 5ystem.
one of tlle nation's major telecommunications holding companies
with telephone operating companIes In 19 states.

CLEVElAND (UPII - Ohio
Lottery Commission officials have
found three Ohio LotiD tickets with
the same siX numbers on them as
were drawn In the Saturday game.
Numbers 1, !, 11, 22, 25 and 26
mean the holders of those three
tickets will share a jackpot of
$1,688,739.
Ohio Lottery Commission officials said 4,&lt;XX&gt;,TI4 worth of tickets
had been sold for tl!e game.
Another 261 tickets had five of the
siX numbers which mean holders
get $1,150, while 11,10! tickets with
four of the six numbers are worth
$91.
Wedoesday's drawing wUI have
an estimated jackpot of $1 million.

Meets Tuesday
Sutton Township Trustees will
hold their final meeting d. the year
atlOa.m. tomorrowattheSyracuse.
Municipal Budding.

Lieense reminder give:t

Today ...mostly suMy with a high
40 to 45. Southwest winds increasing
ID 10 to 20 mph.
Tonlght...tncreastng clouds with
a low near 35. Southwest winds 10 to
20mph.
Tuesday ...cloudy with a chance
of rain. High 40 ID 45.
Exleaded klreca!lt

Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
tnday reminded local businesses
that all amusement machine licenses expire Dec. 31, 1985 (Tuesday) . License lees are $.:11 for each
juke box; $50 for ech of the first
three coin-operated amusement
machines and $25 lor each license
after the first three. Licenses may
be obtained at the mayor's oiOce
Monday through Frilay from · 8
a.m. to 4 p.m.

plaint i1 to .:quire title to the

-J

•''

to

o-r.

following cltocribed rNt 11toll by orcltr of lho Court.
Sold -1 litullod In tho ToWnololp Sotlobiory, Coun1Y of Molgs ond
Stoto of Ohio. Baolnnlng In
.......,., of thl plblic !Old

•Senior Citizans

W«P

d!Q' throuch ~

A cJ.ee Ill !IIIOW Ourrles norlheMI New Year's ·Day .. otherwise
lair. mp. .. llle m1d :108 lo m1d 311!.
lAIW8 15 lo 2$.

to answer the complaint
within twenty-olght do yo of-

tor lhe lost plbilcotlon of
IIIIo notice. which wll 1»
pubUohed one ...h w•k tor

IlK conncutin w.lle, tht

loll Plblcotloq wilt bo modo
on the 13111 cloy of Jonuory
1981, •nd the twlltty-olght

day• for 1n1wer will comll'lence on that d•t•.
In cuo of lho fllure of tho

of Jomoo D. Euler,
deorucl, late of 2441 N.

Fourth. Middleport. Ohio
46788 .
Robert E. Buck,
wtoe rll!iond • -lnool by
Ohio Rullo of Civil Ptooodure
P10boteJudge
jUdgnwnt will I» ,..._ lone K. N-.l10od,
1011nst h tor tho ro1o1 cit- Cieri!

..-to.,._ or--

- - In tho
""""'"'"''·
L8nv
E. Sponcet

aum
M'"oo County
.Common Plooo Court
112)9,18, 23. 30; t1)8.13
61C
\J~

AU AMIRIUN MADE
CARS &amp; TRUCKS
•TRANSFER CASES•
•TORQUE CONVERTORS•
. •USEO - REBUILT
TRANSMISSIONS•

Wr Drllm

•Disabled
•24 Hpur Care.

CAU JOE BOWLAND

992·3595

Aufo!lllltic
1...amitsion Overhaul
II. 2, Patolol, Oh.
1 13

OPEN lltURSDA Y
THR!I !IINOAY
AT

992-5738

12-5-l mo.

Middleport, Ohio 45760

SAlES &amp; SERVICE
We Also Carry
Supplies.

,..,, -

BUilNEII PHONE

t6141 992 -6SSO
RESIDEN&lt;E PHONE
t6141 992 -

112)18. 23. 30. 3tc

Ot ...

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINI1oiEHT OF
FIDUCIMY

l'lobonoCourt
Meigs County. Ohio
E~ of Jo,_ D. Eulor,

B1l I Pl. CoN No. 24,1177.
0!1 a-.... 10, 1181. In
the Melgo County I'Pololh
Court. CoN No. 24.1177......
E..... 48MI 8 .. R. 338,
.. Ohio 48771, -

-'"led EIIICUido&lt;

ol the

1 Card of Thanks
CAID Of THUK$
111t flllllly of PWL HOFFMM IIIIIMI to tfllnk 1U the
kind friends one! • •borl
for lilt 11111111111 llowtrt,
1~ opmslons Df symplllly lftd 11 who helped In
IIIW nr. Special ltl111ks to
ltM lllddltpOII Emorpncy
!qUI, Ylllnns lltmorlll
Hotpltll lllflllld Ill ltv.
(Ill £4111 fvr his COftiOlin&amp;
..... SinCINIJ IP"
)JIICiltld. .

·

111t !Mil 01 Pwt Hollmlll

Have Your Trophy Mounted By A
Full Time Taxidermist

Comp•" Q"fltg, Not
THE'

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
UTILITY BUILDINGS

CROCHE1'ED
HATS
IN YOUR COLORS
Many Other Crafts
Available

317- North Second

Rutland
Gallipolis
742-2225 or 742-2778
446-9244
9:00 A.M. • 6:00 P.M. Monday-Saturday ··

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

11 5 BRICK ST.
POMEROY

HEATING

2 LOCA110NS
New Lima Rd.
?08 Vine St.

11 mo.

THE HAT RACK

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp;

THE TAXIDERMY SHOP

614-379·2 '200

12/30/l mo.

8&amp;0 Mobile Home
Repair Service
SHADE. OHIO
Anything that has to
do wilh a mobile
home. No job too small
or loo big. We do
Setups and
Underpinning.
"Spodal Ratto for
S1nior Citiuns"
PHONE (6141 992-6100

Sizes from 6'x6' Up ·
to 14'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
10-6-tlc

J:d/d '

KOUNTRY

"-;"'"l''

'Q ·'

KLUB

Golf
Equipment

'"

I'H

New Grips lnstollod..•$2.l0 ...
Ormge Golf Bat~ .... $6.00 Dol-.
•New II Prior Owned Clubr 1
•~

•Cuttom Club1

,,

Voutt't Clubs

•Shoes •Troptliu
•Repair

JOHN TEAF~RD ,
Chester, Ohio

t
l

12-11 -1 mo.

BOGGS

RENT A CAR: ;

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

"W1 R1*1 F11 l111" "' •

CALL . :,··
446·4522 ''·'

SALES &amp; SERVICE

U-SA~E

';:; ·
AUTO · ~
RENTAL· ~
St. Rt. 160 North ..

Authorized John Deere.
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Far111 Equip111ent
Parts &amp;Ser¥1ce

G•llltollt, Ohio · · !l•

l ·l·tfc

ll·20-85 1 mo.

7/l ttu0·
.,

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repair andrecore 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

JOHN C. EBLIN
GARBAGE SERVICE
lt. 7. CoolvHie
985-4189
WE HAUL- BIG OR SMALL
PlCK UP WEEKLY

Reasonable R11tes - Rellable

11-22·1 mo.

Cl"SSIPim

*Complete Remodeling
*Room Additions
*Roofing
*Siding
*Garnges &amp; Pole
Buildings

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
Long Bottom, Ohio

Ph. 985-4141

IDS

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
All Makes

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges

Hovt Your Woddi~.

Anniversary or Sptual
Occosion on Vldoo ....Wo
Tape Any Special O«osion.

CHARLES BAILEY
PH. 742-2050

11-2&amp;-3 mo.

Public Notice
Public Notice

NOTICE OF
PUBUC SALE
Pursuant to., Entry Autho·
Sale of Persanal Prop-

IN Probate Caon of

the low water mark of the
Ohio River, on the nonh by
lind of Rov and Gail Henmann, on the west by the ealt

line of doe C&amp;O Railway
COJTllanV's ~ht of wav. on
doe south tov lands of Fronk

Lyncll, being approxlmatoly
600 floet along lhe rlller ond
Street Pomemy, Ohio
45769, .... ""' 6th day of
Janue&lt;y, 1986. 'The property
Second

can be seen by appointment bV

lliephOfllng 614-992-6889 or
304-676-7898.

Debra Sue Dodrill,
Administratrix

112) 26. 27, 30, 3tc
Public Notice

200 feet wide .-.d containing
3 acres more or less, in 100
sera lot No. 376.
This deed conveys the
rights of Jan Mining Co. l't the
roadway Jeading from Sliver
Run River landing to State
Route #7 over lhe Clio 0 Railway tmcts and il i1 under·

otood lhat tho lend hereinoon·
woyed lies between the C&amp; 0
Reilwooy's right of way and tho
low woler moot&lt; of lho Ohio
River.

.

·Roy and Gail Herrman
have the right for ingre11

IN THE COMMON
PLEASE COURT.
MElGS COUNTY.
RICHARD
STEWART,OHIO
ET AL
PLAINTIFFS

vs

and egren over the road and
land herein conveyed 10
their farm property adjoinIng on the north .
The prayer of uid &amp;etion is
that the above described real
estate be awarded to the
plaintiffl , Richard Stew1rt

UNIVERSAL FUEL AND
CHEMICAL CORPORATION
DEFENDANT
and Bony Stewert. by order
NO . 86 CV 367 of the court and for such
SERVICE BY PU81CATION other relief es mev be just
Uniw&lt;UI Flfll and Chomi&lt;1l and equitable .
corporadon. whose last mown

The defendant 11 raquirad

fiod 1hot ~ hu bean nomod dotondlnt in a logo! acUon ontHtod
RICifARD STEWART, ot at VI

lhls notice, which wltl be
published once Hch week

addreos il. 825 Bmadway, Fll'· to 1nawer the complaint
.... Po. 16121, ilhe&lt;ebv nofi- within twenty-eight daya af·
UNIVERSAL RJEL AND
CHEMICAL CORPORATION.
dolwldont. Thlo IC1ion '*bean
lllignod .,... No. 86
357
lll1d Is pending In the Common

cv

Ptoos Courl. Meigs County,
Ohio, Pomeroy, Ollio 45769.
The object of the complaint Is to ecquire title to the
following described real astate by order of the co urt.
Said real estate be ing

s1tua1ed In Township of Sal-

tar the lent publk:ation of
for six consecutive weeks,

the latt publication will be

made on lhe 27th day of
January. 1988, and lho

twenty-eight daya for an·
1wer will commence on that
date.
In , _ of the follure of the

defendant to anawer or other
wise respond as required by

Ohio AtJies of Civ;l Procedure
judgme nt will be rendered
agair'ltt it for the relief de-

-g

manded In the C0011&gt;1alnl.
larry E. Spen04r
Citric of Courts
Meigs County Common

landing end described as to~
lows: Bounded on tho 111st by

112123. 30;
1116. 13, 20, 27 61e

isbury, County of Meig1 and

51110 of O,hlo.

The ••niece e.nd and rMtr
!Grmeoiy known ••

lhe Sllvto' Run Cool Co.._,any

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR·
Also Transmission

PH. 992·5682
or 991-7121

Pleat Court

~

.

' 1'
1

PRINT SHOP ,,.' ~:

Fot All

y,., Ptinling N11hr••' •,

PIUS: Olfict Supplit1 &amp;
Furniturt, Wedding
and Graduation
Stationery, Magnetic
5igns, Rubber Stampt,
Business Forms,
Copy Services, Eh.

. ,

'
"" I.

~ I'
·• 'J1
•. ,
,1

2SS Mill St., Middtoport · I o•
104 Mulbtrry Av., Pomtl'o~,

3-24 -Uc

992-3345

'

EUGENE LONG

"

";J

3/2/lfi .•

tCUT OUI FOR FUTURE USE!

4·5·1lt

get rB&amp;Uif&amp;

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

THE QUALITY

10-17 lin

PARTS and SERVICE

sure to

Roger Hysell
Garage

Fme Estimates

•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

Weather forecast

Public Notice

The object of the com·

tP ..Yioutly lult..,d lost Ht1111l
674 Plum St.
Middleport
•Tender Loving Care

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION
OVERHAUL

985-3561

:=:;;;::;;:;;:==-r==;;::;~~:;;:::==r-=::;;.~~~~;==-r==~~~~~=~
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice

-

ELUM
REST HOME

Telephone ·

Grace Cathryn Sayre, 50, Loulsvllle. Ky., died Frlday at her
resilence.
She was born July 24, 19;Ji in .
Greenbrier County to the late
Vernon W. Sr. and Jocie B. Doster
Harrah.
She was a bookkeeper for Deans
Tire Service and a member of tre
Davis Memortal Baptist Church In
Louisville, Ky. She was a past
matron of the Order of the Eastern
Star In Cottageville. l
Surviving are her husband, E.
Delton Sayre, Louisville, Ky.; two
sons, Kent E. Sayre of Elkhart,
Ind., and Todd 0. Sayre, home; one
daughter, Mrs. Tamara Crenshaw
of Jellers;)ntown, Ky.; three brothers, Glenn C. Harrah of Little
Hocking,_Vernon W. Harrah Jr. of
Plano, Texas, and Roger Lee
Harrah of New Haven; five
grandchllclren.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Foglesong
Funeral Home with the Rev. James
H. Lewis officiating. Burial will
follow In the Evergreen Cemetery
in Letart.
Friends may call at the funeral
horne on Monday between 6-9.p.m.

--

Business Services

Contr!butionsmaybemadetotl!e
Millersburg: Galen L. Winters,
First Presbyterian Church Memor- 36• Anabelm, Calif., Christa A.
ial Fund or Amerlc81\ Cancel: .. Hatfield, 6, Roonoke, Va., In a
car-truck accident on U.S. 62 In
Society.
Holmes County.

John L. Weber, 72, veteran
newspaper man, regional leader
and a resklent of North Pennsylvania Ave., Wells1Dn, dled Saturday In
Riverside Methodist Hospital, Tuesday seniees set
Columbus. _
A NewYear'sEveservlce will he
· A native of Cleveland, Mr. Weber held at 7:30 Tuesday night at the
was a Cleveland West High School Ash St. Freewlll Baptist Church In
and Ohio Unlversliy ·graduate At Middleport.
QU, we was a member of the first
The Middleport Heatl! United
classhto receive a BS degree In
Methodist
Church will hold a New
journalism In the early 19lls, and
was captain of ·the OU swlm team. · Year's Eve service.starting at 7:30
During World War II, he was aU. p.m. on Tuesday. Holy communion
also will be celebrated.
S. Naval dflcer.
Special music wlU be provided by
During his long: n~wspaper ca·
the
church choir with tre singing of
reer, spent almost entirely In
southern Ohio; Weber served as "A Song for the New Year" by
editor of the McArthur Democrat Martin. Donna Jenkins, · church
Enquirer and Wellston Dally Sen- organist. will present two n~mbers,
tinel. He has bee associated with "Joy ID the World" by Handel, .and
Wellston Sentry newspaper tre "He Shall Reign" by Hughes.
The church is located at the
' pasthfew years. Mr. Weber also
corner
d. Main St., and South Third
worked for the Ohio Department r1.
Ave.
Rev.
C. Sonny Zuniga is the
Transportation for four years and
resident
minister.
The service Is
was active In Wellston civic and
open
to
tre
public.
service groups, especially Rotary,
and was a community and regional Watch seniee set
leader.
The Hobson Church of Christ In
Mr. Weber was the SOuthastern
Christian Union will hold a watch
Ohio Regional Council's. "Man-of- night service beglnnlng at 9 p.m.
the-Year" for Jackson County In TueSday night . Don Prk:e and
1984.
. George Aniedo will be speakersand
Weber helped organize the tl!ere will be special vocal numbers.
SEOAL Sportswriters Association
ln1~9.

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wnlt Oartlw Sent i"tl Ctuut rtd D19t
l it c~~ r t St , Pomt row. O tuo 4 ~7 1i~

Logan County.
Sunday
Fremont: Paul D. Kale Jr .. 35.
Napoleon: David D. .Beai. 22, Fremont, In a two-car accident on
Napoleon, In a one-car accident oo a . Ohio 53 In Sandusky County.
Henry Countv road.
.
Saturtiay
Eaton: David S. Whiteley, 22,
Fremont: John L. Ehret, 54,
Lewisburg, In a two-vehicle coW- Fremont, wren hls snowmobUe
slon on U.S. 127 In Preble County. crashed on a Sandusky County
. Dayton: Billy Hal Harris, '!1, road.
Daykln, wben struck by a car on
Lancaster: Harry R. Moore, 51,
Ohio 4 In Montgomery County.
Canal Winchester, ln a one' vehicle
BeUefontalne: Christine Suever, accident on Ohio 674 In Fairfield
:JI, Morrow, Ga., wren hlt by a car County.
as sre walked along. Ohio 117 in
Cleveland: Gayle Parker, 31,
Cleveland, In a one-car accident on
a Cleveland street:
Columbus: Steven M. Summers,
24, Wesley, M~.• pedestrtan, In a
hlt-sklp accldel!t on city street.

loodlng !Tom Mlddloport 10
Goltipolio. Ohlo,. lhonco oo•
233 IMt 10 lhe Nst tlno of
MlnlfVI Hyoel's 2 33/ 100
oono lot lhonce north 51 dot!.
46 min. Nit 106 foot tho
,.,nhNst comor of lllid · tot;
liS .
THE HOCKING DOMESTIC lhtnco MOt 233 ltot 10 tho
....... "''"" plblic rood lrid
COAL COMPANY
nonhweot """* of lllid lot:
DEFENDANT
IOUih 28 cltg. 30
SERVICE BY PUBtCATlON !Mnco
mtn. wolt 105 ltot to tho
The ~~~~=lie Coal piece of ~Inning, contein·
Compony.
• Ohio io
hereby no-lhlt Mhos- lng 57/10 ocroo more "'
nomod cltlondont In ologll .,_ ion.
The prlylf of llid OcliOn lo
lion Glof1ll Llmloy, that tMibovl de1cribed rMI
pllinllff .
H.....g Do- estoto bo oworcltd 10 tho
citptolntlff,
llmlly, by
london!.
orcltr of thl ourt ond for
lllignod
oucll other rellof oo moy bo
ond lo Plndlng In lho
Ptoos Court, Moigo CouniY. just ond oqu~lblt.
Tho dofondont Is required
Ohio. 46789.

\

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Killed were:

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
GEORGE LEMLEY,
PLAINTIFF
N0.85 Cll 339

Magazine will feature a host of Hollywood personalities discussing
their private, and perhaps eccentrtc, ways of staying tl!ln. Actor
Geol'le llamiltmJ, 46, says, "Your hody is your temple" -how very
original of George - and adds that he fasts and meditates. Then
there's Ana Landers, 67, who reports that she takes off needless
pounds by romping through her eight-room Chicago apartment
overlooking Lake Michigan.
.
Beverly Sills will tell how she lOSt 00 pounds In seven months man
!100 calorie diet. JuBe llqelty, meanwhlle, clalmsshe eats whatever
sre wants one day and lasts·the next. But Dallas' Morgan Brlttanny
Insists she has kept her weight at 110 pounds on m sheer perversity_
"When I go to dinner, I order somethtngldon'tUkeandtrenplckat It
all night," she says.
GIJMI'SE'j: Borlll Becker, the 17-year-old tennis whizz ldd and
last years Wlmbleton champion, wlU be profiled In Pentoouse tn
February with a s1Dry entitled "The Clown Prince d Tennls." ...
John 'ITavolta and Robert Stlgwood, who produced the movie
"Saturday N1ght Fever,'' are planning a sequel of Tony Manero's
nocturnal gyrations. The movie is to be fUmed In Hollywood and
there are reports Travolta wlU write tre screen play. ... The
Metropolitan Opera AsSociation got Its first woman president last
week when Mrs. G11Jert W. Humpbrey of Cleveland, Ohio was
elected ID the post.

...... ..
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Area deaths

Conservaion League meets

: An exchange of tree ornaments
was a feature d. the holiday dinner
party of 'the Middleport Child
Conservation League held at Sabastran's In Parkersburg.
j Members also exchanged gilts
ll!ld slgnl!!l a card for Thelma Sines

.

II killed on Ohio highways

Monday, December 30, 1985

Garden Club meets
• Annual hollclay party of tre
Wildwood Gardeq Club was held at
the horne of Carrie Grueser.
: Kalbcyn Miller had chargeoftre
meeting with a letter being read
fioom the Galllpolls Developmental
&lt;;enter thanldDg the club for
· Jl!.'e5elltlng a program there. Five
ctub members worked at - ~ Meigs
&lt;hmty Garden Club Association's
allllual holiday Dower show with
~ entering plants and arrangements. Evelyn Hollon received 14
r~, Ada Holter, two, and

Monday. December 30, 1986

~"

SUPERIOR ~.,' ;
SIDING CO. :: 1

VINYl &amp; ALUMINU~'' '

608

E. Mainolooolw.l,_,oio.l

Complete Gutter Worli ... J'

POMEROY,O .

Complole Remodetinll"l
Roofing ofill Types . ~~ 1

992-22S9

Worked in home aree .., c

NEW liSTING - Roc~ Sprin1s Road- Approx. 4 nice
acres of land with a two
story house, 3-4 bedoooms,
2 baths, 2 kitchens foo use
as a duplex. Excellent condo·
lion. Insulated for heating
economy. includes 2 car
garage with storage, other
buildings. Great tocat1onl
$43.000.00.
NEW liSTING - 6.35 acre
country estate - Barn,
sheds, 2 ponds. and a nice
l'h story home in good re·
parr. Electric heat plus a
woodburner for cheap heat.
Call lor an appointment.
$43,900.00.
NEW LISTING - High on a
hill but what a view. This
ranch type home can be
yours. Foreclosuoe property
and priced to sell at
$34,900.00.
NEW LISTING - Heoe is
what you have been looking
tor- Ohio River frontage in
Syracuse. 3 lots and an
older house. cleaoed land to
the river. All lo r $18,900.00

'

NEW LISTING - Invest·
men! prpperty in Middleport
- business room is leased
plus 4 rental apartments
overhead. Good gross income. Owner may help fi·
nan ce. $42,900.00.
NEAR CHESTER - Vacant
in the country. Great
buidingor mobrle homesole.
10.51 acoes, some cleared
lor ouo home plus a small
share of a produ cing gas
well. plus a spring tor free
water. $8,500.00.

20

REALTORS
Henry E. Clela nd , Jr.
992-6191
Jean Toussel 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992_
-5692
,.....

'I

,.

(All COllECI:

•• I

Ph. (6141 843-S42$' •
IJ.I2-2 md.'
I

)

TOWN &amp; COUIIII'f
YEIERINARIAN •·

''"
CUNIC
'" .
Paul E. Shockey, DVM. J
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

,

305 Jackson be. : l
$MAU ANIMAL itOIMtf
Mon.-Wtd.-Thun. 3-5 pm '
luos. 6'30-8; Fri. 1·2 PJi{' '
Saturdar 10-11 :30 am '
IAIGI ANIMAl &amp; ; '
SUIGIIY IY APPT.

PH. 304·675-244 f'
BEND AREA CAU."
Ripley OHice ; ,
For Hours "f
304·372.5709·..
10-14-lk

"VINYL SIDING .. 1
*ALUMINUM SIDING '· .
"BLOWN IN
..
INSULATION

BISSELL ' '
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built "Free Estimates"

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860
No Sundoy Calls ,

g~ou n d

POMEROY - Good neil!hbor·
hood c~se to school 2.3ii acre
tot. beautiful newer Sfllrt foyer
home. 3 bedroom~ 2 bath$,
lull basement. woodbuoner
hoofl-ups in family room, gar·
age, central air &amp; heat pul11fl.
All electric home. Assumab~
loan, 9 ~% rnterest. Approx.
22 yeaos oo ba~nce of
$40,000. $355.74 per month
principle &amp; interest.

yeaua~

.. Free Estlmatea ' '

l / J ' ' ""-'.

54 Misc . Merchanclis~

Battery

Sal~~.

COMPLETE LINE Of
FARM AND AUTO ·

BATTERIES

}

AGRI BOSS ·,·;
12- VOLT-6 VOLT
3 YEAR WARRANJY,. I

$3995 .,

ONLY
ML SIZES IN STOCK :

MGM Farm Citi.
Service Station"

A.W

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

,.

;

�.Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

Business
Services

41

LAFF·A·DAY

Houses for Rent

with rod pin stripe, AM -FI',-1·
CIIHttl, . 4.500, Call lifter .;4·

I ~1116

PHONE 992 .. 7075

We Wish All Our
Customers AMerry
. Chrlttmac and AHappy
·~ Mew Vaarl
.

'l~

11·29·B5 I mo. P&lt;l

I

Alfred Community. References

and deposit required . (:Ill ll!J1"'

-

f,
f

98&amp;·3849.

pm 304-937-2026 .

llDI* .

I ~r,

6 room houM, open ganga. In

t

Oh.

~

WOK~!\~ tf
COUI.t&gt; ~ ACUP
OfT(.Itol~ .

1981 Z 28 · Camero.

•

,

6:00 D ril NowaCenter
Cil • 100,000 Nam6. That
Tuna
I]) Mazda SportaLook
(I) CZJ Ill (I) Ill ()21 Newa
(J) 3~2-1 . Contact (CC)
® Eyewltneaa Newt
II]) Poworhou11
fJI Olffrent Strokea
' 6:05 (]) Down to Earth In
Stereo.
6:30 0 ril NBC Nightly Newt
@ Green Acre•
I]) Aoi'QbiCI: Bocllea In Motion
ill Ill ()21 ABC News
C7J NBC Newt .
Ill ill il) CBS Nowo
ill Doctor Who, .
II]) Body Eloctrlc
fJI One Day at a Time
8:36 (])Safe at Home in Stereo.
7:00 D ril PM Magazine
I]) Courtship of Eddle'a
Father
I]) SportaCentor
ill Entertainment Tonight

~~,:

Houie·or apt . for rent. Fumllhi!MI
or unfurnlshad. 114-992-2381
dava or 114· 992· 8~23 evn.

72

4 bedrooms.. wood tiurn'lna
flrepltee. No pets. Cell 814·

long wide bed. price $160 .. Ca11

Truc~s for Sale

1972 GMC truck V-8, PS, PB,·

949·22&amp;3.

304·4&amp;8·1997.

CAPTAIN EASY

MoK•a 9AY~ THE &amp;UPPOSEP
MAftiVf; COPPER LOPS
BEE~ OISCOVEREO
RI6HT HERE .

~

"You paid me in advance,
we'll plead insanity... "
IIII!IIDY IIII:II I
S1: rv 11:es
11

Help Wanted

One certified Medical Technolo·
gilt. weekday1. Send r11ume or
IPPIV to Medl.. l Plozo, 203
J1cbon Pike, G11Upoll1 , Oh

4&amp;831 .

teo.ooo 10

110.000. Port·tlmo 112,000 to
118,000. No selling. Repeat
bulin.,, Set your own hourt.

per 100. Guaranteed PIYment.
No experl.,ce· No IIIH . Detlill
send ••lf·tddrnnd atamptd
enve~pe: ElAN VITAL-68'7
341 B Enterprise Rd. Ft. Plerce 1
. R. 33482.

B-13 Hn

FOR

AIL YOUR

WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195

B·B·Ifc

J&amp;F

CONTRACTING

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

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

CIRCLE
CONTRACTING
Comp!ett Building
and

Contracting Service
(Free Estimates)

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.
long Bottom, Ohio

PH. 949-2649

11 -12·1 mo .

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Down from Rutland Past
Office, will be runnin&amp;until
after Christmas. New &amp;
used toys, somethin&amp; for
the whola family, dolls,
tools, novelties, etc.
·
12-4·15 I mo .

334112.

Bashan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

EOI\' A-mbiV Workl 1800.00

Plf' 100. Ouaranlltd payment.

No Experience-NO 1•1•. O.tails

Mnd Htf-addr•sed ltempld
envelOpe; El11n Vltal-58ot7 ~418
Enttrprlle Rd. Ft. Pierce. FL

Announ ce menls

WANTED:Exptrlenced Produce
menager. No IMa than 3 yean

.. porionco. Good poy • benof·

3· Announcements

1t1. Sand rnume to The Dally

Sontlnol. a•.729 c .

I

Government jobs •11,040SWEEPER 1nd I.WinO machine 1&amp;8,230. Now hiring. Col 806,
rlipair, p1rt1, and supplies. Pick ,087-8000, ext. R-8805 for
up and delivery, Davit Vtcuum current federellilt .
1

~~8 - 029~ .

Kup those New VQJI AnoiU·
tiont. I.Ote weight, fMI !JMII,

liM extra dolltra. 1DAM-8PM,
614-448-~746 .

Recine Gun Shoot tponsored by
Recine Gun Club. Every Sunday,
beglnnlno 11 1 :00 p.m. Ftctory
Choke12 guegelhatguna.
Joe Hysell, Sentinel carrier,
wlahn to tfiM'Ik hll cuttomen
for their Chrit1mtl gifts.
New Year 1 981 Perm Specill.
J1n . 2nd to 16th, t6 .00 off all
Perms. 126 tnd up . Benv'•
Beauty Boutique, 7 2nd StrMt,
Maton , 304·773-5272 .

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only

9- 30·11

CARPENTER
. SERVICE
-

Addona end remodeling
Rcoflng and gutter work
Con crete work
Plumbing and e lectrical
w ork
(Free Est in1ate1)

V.' C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992 -73t4
Pomeroy, Ohio
12·8·11c

814 · 7~2 -2204 .

waaher, dryer, AC. under·
1)4nning • porch. Elc. cond.,
M•k• an Offer. Cell 114-266·

1821 or 814-268-8316 .

1982 14x70 wUh 22ft. expendo
on rented tot. 2 bdr, AC.
underpinning, porch. metal

building. Coli 814·248-9834.

TEAMI Join the Army National

Guard and you have a good
p11rt·tlme cer..r--gaod benefit•·
-monthly peycheck -· NO

LAYOFFS. CeH 304-67&amp;·3960
or 1-800-842·3819.

12

Situations
Wanted

7314.

room. unfurnl.lfled. vinyl under·
pinning Included. Mu1t 1ell. Call

304-n3-6173 .

Fll! oi!Cio l
21

lOST: Bl1ck Chow-Chow, temtle . wear ing red coller ,
answer• to 'Portie ', lest seen on
Upper At. 7. Reward If found,
also puppy, male . 1h Spit! &amp; 1ft
Irish Sener. Weerlng bluecolltr.
Answen 10 ' R1mbo'. Call 114·
317-0.CI8 or 114-441-2370.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

Business
0 pportunity

lNG CO . ..commends that you
do .. n•• with people vou
know, 1nd NOT to 1end monew
through ttlt mall until you hava
Femete Beegle /os1 vlclnlty of · lnvestlgeted the offering .
24ttt &amp; Jefferson 6 Jlfkho Rd.
Own your own jun-aportsweer,
Name Ledy . Wearing brown
collar. no tags .
or found ltdln apparel, children•. 11rge
tin. pttitt, combination store,
call Charles Perfll 304-675·
mtttfnlty, ICCIIIOrieJ. Jord ·
2887 or Runy See 176-2298 .
ache. Chic. lee. Levi, E Z Str..t,
lzod, Eaprit , Torioy. Catvln
Klein, Strglo Valente, Evan
8
Public Sale
Picon•. Uz Clelboma, Member~
Only. Otsollne, Hqhhte.. over
&amp; Auction
1000 others . 113. 300 to
t24,900 inventory, trtinlng,
grand opening ttc. Can
RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER flxturn,
open 16 days. Mr. Loughlin
SERVICE. Ettate, farm, andque, 18121888 1!6&amp;6.
liquidation ultt. llcentld Ohio
and Wnt Virginia. 304-773·
5786 or 304-713 -6430.
22 Money to loan

If'""

We pay c..h for late model cte1n
used car.1.
Jim Mink C hev .·Okls Inc .
Bill Gene Johnton

614-448-3872

HOME OWNERS-ReUntnce to
low fixed rate. UMequhy for env

purpose. leedtr Monoage Co.,

1988 Schultz 10150, 1 bed·

clolod. 13200. EC. 81 4·949·

21155 anytime.

~:~rd .

M"" se11. 3o4-773-

36 Lots &amp; Acreage
Farm for lilt: no hou.11, 2 bam a.
county water • septic tank. Call

100 acre.~ with 2 gu wells on
peved road . A1cine area . Call

814-992-71144.

Rcnlals

4&amp;769 or call 81 4·992·

Buying dally gold , silver coin•.
rings, jewelry, ster11ng ware, otd
coint , lerg e cun.ncy. Top pri ces. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd . A\le, Middleport, Oh. 614·

992·3478.

- - -- -end·lDHr
cBuying R•w Fur.
Be~

hld11. Selllng· trapplne aupplies .
Wheat end nlte lltu. George
.

Coll814·446 -lfifi8.

1982 14JI70 With 22 ft. tl•
pando. 2 bdr. Cal 114-246·

9634.

2 bdr., on At . 7 , complttely
furnlahed, weter peid, 1200
mo .. ttc. dep. required. Call

41

Houses for Rent

14x70, 3 bdr .. in Centenafll. CMI

6\4-446·4292.

Pi.ano luning and repair. tunt up
for the holiday1. tpeclal dlt ·
count. We rd' • Keyboard, 304-

87&amp;-8800 ., t7fi-3824.

31

Homes for Sale

By owner. Mu" sell-moved . 3
bdr. ranch, on" car garage.
wtlllling diJtance ffom Nonh
Otllle High School. Atducld to

*29,900. CoK 81~·388· 8711 .

~ bedroom hou1t for HIJ.
flrtplact, 3 mi. southofGalllpo111, 1~2 . 600 . Ctll dl'f' SU·

44e·181fi or nlghll 814-448·
1244.
Govemment Han• from 11
IU· repelr). Also dellquent UiJI

proporty. Coli 806·887-8000
E••· G~-4882 lor lnlormotlon.
1- - - - - - - - -lc-

Interview

•sa.

wringer Wllhtrt, &amp; lhOH. New
livlngroom Jultet t199·•1199,
Iampi, alao buying coal &amp; wood

ME~TS IEqu1l Housing Oppor·
tunltyl monthly rent tterh at
e1ee for 1 bedroom encP t204
for 2 bedroom, deposit t200,
located n11r Spring Valley Pleu
and Foodland, pool and Cable TV
av•ileble. office IMH.Irt 11 potll·
ble 10 em to4 pm 1nd 7 pmto8
pm Mondoy-Fridoy, Coli 814·

Nicely fumilhtd moblt home.
eff. apt., central elr and heat In
city. sduhs only. Call 114-441·

0338.

Redecorated apt .. 2 bdr., t11SO

to U&amp;O. Call304·87&amp;·fi104 or
304-67fi-fi38e or 304-876·
7196.
Upltalr• unfurniehed apt .. cer·
peted, all utlllllft paid, no
children, no pets. Call 114-.WI-

1e37.

Fumlshldapt. 2bdr., 131 Ya 4th,
Gelllpolls , $191 wattr peld. Call

446-4418 oft" 7PM.

740'12 SecondAVe. 3bdr .• •190
mo., dep . rtQulred. Cell 114·

448·4222 botwoon 9 • fi ,

Fumiahtc:l apt ., 4 rooms • bt1h,
no pets, adulta. Avallabll D1c. 1 .

Ce11814·446-1619.

Llrge 6 room upltaira apt.,
tumished kitchen , t200 mo.
plus utilltl11, 238 ht. Ave. Ret.
&amp; dap. no ~ts . Cal1814· 448 -

Building Material•
Blott;, brick, NWer pipH, win ·
d~ws, lintels, etc. Claude Win ·
ters, Rio qrende, 0 . Ctll 114·
24~ · 6121 .

Kentucky Lump, Ohio Lump,
Ohio Stoker. Ytrd Or delivery,
cement blockl and buUdln·g
material. Oallipolla Block Co.,

Call 814·448·3169.

Plno St., Golllpollo, Ohio Coli
e14-44e-2783.

l4YNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chtlrs prJced from

1286. 10 189~ . Toblu, e&amp;O ond
up to 1128. Hid... · botlo , l~90 .

and. up to •sao., aofe tied•
2 bdr., 1 or 2 adults, no PI1J, 11415, Reclinara, •22~ . to
dop. &amp; rof. Coii8U-387-7743. ' 1376., Lompo lrom 128. to
4125. pc, dlnettu from t109. ,
2 bdr. trailer, tUO mo. plua to 4315. 7 pc. t1891nd up. Wood
dopooo. Call 114·378·243&amp;.
table with .. x ch1in t2115 to
1745. Dnk 1110 up to 1226.
Good , clun, 3 bedroom.. fur - Hutchea, tiS50. Bunk bed com·
nlahed . A.C.. aeml prlv1te lot. 1 plett wtth mattreaiH. 1271S.
child, no peta. 3 mil.. ab~
1nd up to t391 . Baby beda.
New Havtn At . 33. *1815. par
4110 . Mettre111t or box
month. Coli 304-882-24t8 .
ill)rlngs, full or tWin, tl3., firm,
03. tnd 183. Qut*' · uta,
4225. 4 dr. ch11t1, t49. 1 dr.
44 Apartment
ches11,
B1d tnm ...

JACKSON ESTATES APART·

•aa.

UO.ond 126 .. 10 gun . Gun

Blodc, brick , morttr 1nd me·
.1onry aupplill. Mountain Stele
Block, At. 33, New Heven. W.

Vo. 304-182-2222.

&amp;6

Pets for Sale

Ufi • 136. bod lrlmoo 120.
126, • . 130, ltlng !tome lfiO.

Good aeltQ1ion of bedroom
auh1.1 , rocker•. metal CJbln.tJ,
headboards 13B &amp; up to eea.

Nice 3 bedroom t250 1 month,

New 0111 bdr. efficiency tpt. Call

e14-44e-7473.

6 room• &amp; bath, niWty deco·
rated. Inquire at 918 Second
Ave .. Gallipolis.
4 room• a. bath. niWty deco·
rlted . Inquire 11 918 Second
Ave., Gelllpollt.

'AI duple• for rent, 2 bdr., 2 miles
from Holzer. 1 yr. old. Call

814 -«e•1910 or 614-379·
2241.
bdr. home welk· in cedar
clo~t;t . Kyger CrHk 1choot dis·

814 - ~48 - 0390 .

3 rooms &amp; bath all new carpet,
prlvet1, ell utilltl11 peld, except

' electric . Call814·44&amp;·71515.
Efftnclancy apertment . 2
rooms. b1th, full banmtnt.
Furnl1hed. In Pomeroy above
Krogers. 81 4·992·1216 or814·

992-7314.

New 1 and 2 bedroom furnlahld
epts. and houN In Middleport.

Coli 614·992-&amp;304 or 814·
448·1662.

3

trlc:t. Coli 814-448-0648.

Nice 3 bdr. home all kitchen
appllences, located Sanders
Drive. Oelllpolls, UOO per mo..
.1ec . dep. ref. required . Call

61 4 -446 - 02&amp;~ .

2 br tpartmentl In Henderton.

Efficiency cottage, t65 . 00
wHk , utiiiUn paid. phone304 01

G7&amp;·fi609 .

HOUSES FOR RENT: 811 Wll·
low Line, 3 bedrooma, living
rooM, blth. ett-in ~ltch1n with
Wl.lhlf and dryer hookup) and
cerport. Renter PIYI electric 111d
w11er. 1200 per month plus
d
lit
1 VIand. 3
btth.
ltvlng room, dlntne room, kti·
chen, laUfldry room, and bas•
ment. Renter pays Wltlr, Qll
and tlec1ric. t260 per month
plu1 depolit.
1102 Vl1nd, 3 bedrooms, 2
blths. living room, dtnlng room.
tamflty 10om tnd kitchen wltll
w•lher and dryer hookup. Aen·
ter peyt Ull, Wlttr end el.ctric.
t171S per month lu1 depoil1.

Tt

Ill. e1 4 - 4~&amp; - 8221 .

btdroo~.

304-676-1972.

Nice 1 lnd 2 br ap1rtments
downtown. 304 -t76-221B

8·8

Middlaport N. 4th Avenue, 2
tledroom. tuml1htd apertment.

metal office d•kl. 3 mil• OU:1
Bulavltle Rd. Open 9tm to ISpm.
Mon . thru Set.

304-e82·268e.

46 Furnished Rooms
For rent SIHplng Room• and
light hou~• k11plng room1. Park
Central Hotel. CaU 1 14 -441·

0758.

TOWN • COUNTRY
REAL ESTATE,
lroltor, 878 -6&amp;48

9862 .

76

Boats and
Motors for Sale

John boat for sale. Call 814·

76

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Himtlaytn , Persian and
Sltm111 khtens. AKC Chow
puppie1. Call 441 - 38~ efler

Four T.R. ~1S - 70R , 14 Inch,
Goodytar Etgles ST redlalt, like

looking tor f•male English Bul·
ldog with plpert, Reg . Pug for
atud Hrvice. Call 114-246-

Service s

Auto Parts

8o Accessories

now, 1180.00. 304'SB2-2968.

81

a

group is framed for

Home
Improvements

ALLEY.OOP

•

Wllk sold.. wormed. tirllt
shotL 1 male, 1 female. Call

SINKY'S RIGHT,OOP! IF

814-448-0708 .

GOOD USED APPUANCES

WNhers, dry1r1, rlfriotrt~tors.
rangea . Skagga AppUancaa.
Uppu Alvw Rd. be11de Stone
Cr•t Mottl.l,•·4-tl-7398.
County Appliance, In(!. Oood
used applltnCH and TV Mil.
Open BAM to IPM . Mon thru

Sot. 814·44&amp;·1899, 127 3rd.

sll!l!llll: s

~ illlll

~ LIV~SIUCk

61

J .and L. Installation. RoofinG.
vinyl lldlng,. 11orm doors end
windows. Free Htlmatn. Cal..,

Farm Equipment

A... GaiUpollo. OH.

a

Valley ·Fumiture, nM
uHd.
Llrge IICtion of quality fuml·
ture . 1211 Eastern Ave .,

Galllpollo.

Rt. 7 North of O.Jiipoll1. C1ll

e1~ - 44e - 7444.

U.S. 315 WMt. Jackeon. Ohio.

81 4·2SS-Mfi1 .

M1111y Ferguton , New Holl1nd,

S.E. Ohio.

Weiher &amp; dryer Ht ,, 85, auto
weehtr •715, Kenmore wllhar
IllS, Kenmore w•aher llkt naw
t171S , Kenmore dithwe•her
111!1, tide by llde Admiral
refrigerator 1180, 2 dr. Phllco
rtfrlgent01 1915, Frld1lre rtfTig eretor 18&amp;, 3!1 ln. elect. renge
195.30 ln. g11r~~ngel1! , liln.
911 range t81. 8keag1 Ap·
pllance Upper Atver, Rd. 114-

Gravity box, auger driven , grain

fHdor 1276., buah hog 1296 ..
post holt d•ger t175 ., manure
IP..ader

8622.

••so.

e14·992-2n2.

COLEMAN WATER WELL.
·oRrLUNG
,

CROSS. SONS

Buth Hog Sal• &amp; Servlca. Over
40 UHd tractora to dloo11 from
&amp; co~ltte ltne of new &amp; ultd
equtpment. Ltrgett •ltction In

E·Z Credit Mollohan Fumlture,

young girl's life is pro-

THAT CRIDER!

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. local referenchl furnished .
Frtt ettimttel. Call collect
1·114-237-0488 , dey or night.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

Call &amp;1.t-.286-

Pump 11111, Mrvice. Reginere&lt;t·
in Ohio. All ·work guerenteed.
Call 304-273-2B11. RevenJ·
wood, W. Va.

GASOLINE ALLEY

You'll be sortlj
when A-Beam

Rover, Ican't

RON ' S Television Service .
Houte call• on RCA, Quazer, .

b~li~ve ~ou)'e
CjiVInq ljOUr

GE . Specialing In Zenith. Call •

304-67e ·2388 or 814-446 · .
2484.

on!

TVawa4!

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304-876-1331 .

448,-7398c

Stove and refrigerator aolkl
wood triple ctreuer and mltch·

lng c:hoot. Coli 814-448·7827 .

876-2088 or 876-73e8.

3,000 Ford dielll PS, DL, good
tlrM, nt'W ptlnt, 14,800; 240
Ftrmall wide front , 3 pt ..
12, 500. Cell 304-1571-2328 or

Starks Tree and Llwn Service,
lendacaping. 304· 676 -2010.

304-678·2108 .

63
Antiques

Livestock

Reg . Morgan mare for nit. Call

e14-379-2fi86 .
China cabinet ••c. cond. UOO.

Call 814-245-8071 .

&amp;4 Misc. Marchandiae

Ohio. Col 814·448·He2.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Pook,
Aouta 33, North of Pomero_y.

Lorgololl. Cal 114:112·7478.

304·e7&amp;-2296 .

Plumbing

Large round baits of hay no ...

Coli 814-44e·10fi2 oftor 6PM.

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

1,000dr01, olrn 12, 13, 14, 16,
IS. 18.5. 8 mlloo out Rt. 218.

Top quality conditioned mixed
hoy. t1 .30 por bolo. C.Q 814·
949-30159 efter 8:00p.m.

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Galllpoll1, Ohio
Phone 814·448 -3888 or 614-

Black powder ti.H , muzzle·
loading tcc•torlll IPICialilt,
Koebt4'1 Guna • Altpfllr, Mill·
creek Rd. Open 8 ·8 P.M. Mon .
thur Fri. Sot. 1·5. Coli 814·448·

Oet,hay end alfalft orchard gre11

Cellltt~n '• UHd Tire Shop. Over

Calll1•·2115-8281 .

2318.

ml•ed hay. CoH81~· 887·81e4.

Oround .., com, IB3. ton;
142.150 'h ton;
V. ton . Your
uckt. Minimum 100 lbs. Long

•22.

Bonom, Ohio 81 4·886·3681 .

Dalry caM9 ft . widewhhremote

I Jumbleo: BATHE

'

'

QUORUM STUCCO

POKER

Answer: What a duck hunter might be-

Fl...wood 100% Mtloned oak,·
split, delivered, stacked, no.
like
new, used 2 months, insert or
free lttndlng . Call 814-448·

0319.

T r &lt;~n:&gt;pur l it l iOil

= , - -.,.-..,--::--:-:-71
Autos for Sale

&amp;481 .

~2.000

.

Stv• 60 percent! Flalhlng trraw
Iiana 12891 Lighted. non· envw

*289. Unlighted UIB. IF ...
lmeroll Soo locoiiV. 18001423·
0183, onytlmo. 18001 128·
2928. oxt. 804.
TONY'S GUN REPAIRS. hot dlo
~831 .

clothing, (ln1uleted Decron
covtraH• a~rnouflale. Otlftge,

brown 128.001. forn Bomo-

Ealt· PI•"•newood,
Junction lndependenoe Road·

1977 Toyota Celica GT. tully

ioeded. e opd.. 11200. Coli
814-44t-0028.
8ody Truck. Call 114 ·388 ·

8248.

C &amp;. M Cleaning &amp; Furnace
Repair. Alto plumbing. 10 yra.
experi•nc t . Call 614 - 256 ·

fiSH .. PLAVCARDS ..
AN' PITCH HOSS

SHOES

C 6 M Cleaning &amp; Furnac e
Repair . Also plumbing. 10 yrs.
e " perl a n ca . Ca ll 6 14- 2 58 ·

CAN'T 'IOU
THINK OF
SOMETHIN'
r&amp;~;~- ) .9'1 ELSE TO
DO ?

13&amp;1 .

Excavating

• · 75,000 mlln. tsoo. Call

114 · 2~fi - 8071 .

85

Ge.neral Hauling , ·

Call 81~· 448-021i4 .

1111 Toyota I apd .. 1 owner,

1891 .. eon 814-448-9882.

11 Ford Granld1 4 dr'., new

Mu.tane•.

AFF~D

J1m11 Bov• Water Service. Also ~
pools filled . Call61 4 · 256· 1 141 •
or 114-448 -1176 or 814-448 -

11"?

7911 .

1974 Ford Country SqUirt st•tl·
onw-aon. !9,000, exc. cond.

3· 11111

Ooa d-1 E"c!Weting, ba1emeht1,
tooters. d riveways, se ptic tank• .
ltndscaping . Call a nytime 814·
448 -4537, Jamea L. Deviso n,
Jr. owner.

CAN YOU

1811 Corvtlr good cond., new
tlret, new btttery, nelda tun•

wtl

ICen ·s Wl!lter Service. Wells.
clsta m J, pools fi ll ed. Phone
814 · 367 ~0623 or 614-367- •
7741 night or day .
~augh 't Weter Service. Wella,
Clltarns, pools. Fa it, reliabl e
111rvlce. Ca n 814-2156· 1240 or
814 · 258 · 1130 . RtaJont ble
ratfl,

87

Upholstery

tell

pocltlltlo lot *1110 or "'" out.
Col18t~ · 371 · 2130.

rvllle ' • •

Did At. 21, Fri, lot, ' '""·
1:00·7:00 PM lunlfl XmuS:OO PM ,..,,, FIIEE DEUV·
EIIY , 304·818 -3334 (Kida
Comouflogol·

At . 1 , Box 366, Oallipotis . CeH

814-3e7-0678.

miiN. Coli 81 4·

oft• -.,m.

19n MGB. 1987 GMC Stoto

Rabbit ·fur COlt with fox col~r.
Onty wom 1 few tlrnu. A ..lng

JIM 'S PLUMBING 11o HEATING . .

1983 fllymouth Turi1mo, 2.2. 6

19d,

448 - 7~14

Mlx.cl herdwood 1lab1, t12 . per
bundle , containing apprax, 1 ~
ton. fob. Ohto P1lltt Co .• Pornt·
roy, Ohio. Ptlone 814·912·

4~8 · 4477

83

1911· white Mustang with red
tnttrlor. A· 1 condition. 514 ·

7~2 - 2326 .

1112 Pontt.. Flroblrd. low
miiMO•. eac:efttnt condhk)n, elr

cond .• R-8. power bl'lkll. T-W.

18" ponoblo oolor RCA TV. W·W, C·C, lt~OO. CoH tftor B
ISO. 304-878·2118.
p.m.. 304-e711-31n.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Se c. Alt'e., Gallipolis .
614 -4.48 -7 833 or 614-446t

1833.

foundly effected by the
civil rights movement that
has come to her sleepy
Mississippi 1own. (60 min.)
Ill FreedOm Bowl:. Wllhlngton vt. Colaiado Live
from Anaheim, CA. (3 hra.)
[HBO! MOVIE: 'Tho Mupo
pou Take Manhattan' (CC)
[MAX] MOVIE: 'Norme Rae'
8:05 C5) MOVIE: 'Zarek'
9:00 I]) 700 Club
(!) Solko Skall America In·
tarnallonal: Pelre Compotl·
don Competition from St.
Paul, MN. (60 min.)
ct ill il) Kate a. Allie Kate
and Allie find lhemsalvos

By JUDea Jacoby
EAST
WEST
Would you like to lake a look at fi· +K J 6 4 2
• 97 5s
nesses? There will be a few wrinkles • 6
7
involve~!, so you serious bridge devo- • 10 6 5 1
.AH
+10785
tees mllht profit from saving this
98 4
week's columns. It mlpt even be a .
SOUTH
way of fulfilling a New Year's resolu+10
tion to improve your bridge skills.
.... Q 10 s 4 2
North and South cue-bid their way
t872
to six hearts. West probably should
+K .Q J
have led a spade but instead placed his
Vulnerable: Neither
lone trump on the table. That lead
Dealer: North
declarer some options . After
I·wltnnltn• In his band, he first tried lead- • W&lt;tl
Eool
Pau
1~~-~~~~:~(If West held the ace, 12 !
would Le easy.) East took the di- Pass
Pass
amond ace, leaving declarer iilth a Pau
Pass
Pass
second diamond loser. South, however, Pa1111
to the test, later on ted a spade to
Opening lead: • 6
dumm1y and put in the queen. :When
he had his 12 tricks.
deal. Firlt find out about
the locatio)n of the diamond ace. Then,
If necessary, take the spade finesse. likely have returned to his hand to lead
defender East must be given fall- the suit ooce more. East would then
ing grades. If he had casually ducked ·have taken two ~Iamond tricks to ·set
the first diamond, South would very the contract.

I

~&amp;lcMl~tJ
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Aca088
I Cockscomb
6 - up
(perform
,poorly)
11 Liquid

1

·
•

A aM Furniture Manufacturing.
St. Rt 7 , Crown City, Oh. Call

614-2&amp;8-1470, coli Evo. 614·
448 · 3438 . Old &amp; new
UphoJtertd .

••

TllEV USE THE NUMBERS
TO KEEP TRACK OF TilE
DA'/5, AND MQNTil5, AND
'(EARS AND EVERVfi.IIN6 ...

THAT'S J.IOW T~EI' KNOW
ANOTIIER YEAR AA5 60NE
8~, ANI7 A NEW ONE IS
ABOUT TO 8E61N ..

(A).

ill Letonight Amerloe
(ID.T..I
' 1 1:40 [MAXI MOVIE: 'H.O.T.8.'
·' 't11 ,45 tlff)l ABC Ntwl Nlghtllno
11 2:00 (I) IIIII of Groucho
(!) NFL Filma
ill En..rtainment Tonight
with
Peter
Interview
O'Toole.
(ID MOVIE: 'The RoyI I Hullt
of the Sun'

4 Adjust
GNJ. cily
6 Etrrontery

!fl

7 ctor
Holbrook
8 Eggs (Lat.)

measure

12 Refuge
9 Range of
13 Egg.shaped
knowledge
14 African
antelope
U Ca&amp;nlp
16 Bom (Fr.)
lilt follows

left alone on New Year's
Eve. (R).
ill Firat Platoon A com-

tain: ROC8pturioo the Pall
(CC) Plas Newydd and
Wighlwick Manor ora explored. (80 min.)
9:30
C1J Newhart (CC) Micheel follows Dick' a advice
and finelly stands up to
Stephanie. IRI.
® Nineteen Eighty Flva: A
Year of Dloccvery
tO:OO II ril MOVIE: 'Tribute'
ICCI
I]) Champlonthlp Roller
Derby
. .
CZJ ·-American Almanac A
cover story profile of White
House Chief of Staff Don·
aid P. Regen ie featured .
(60 min.)
ill ® Cegney end Lecay
(I) Treaaura Hcuioa of Britain: Recapturing tho Pall
(CCI Plea Newydd and
Wighlwlck Menor are explored. (80 min.)
II]) Newow8tch
IHBO! Kenny Rogore and
Dolly Parton
[MAX] MOVIE: 'Dreomacape'
10:06 C5) Billy Graham Cru11do
10:30 'Cil Va.riaty
II]) Thit Old Hcu11 !CCI
11 :00 II ril (IJ II ()J Newt
I]) Men from U.N.C.LE
I]) ESPN't Bloop~&lt;~
ill McLaughlin Group
ilJ EyewltniH New•
[!) Talevltlan New• Photography: 1984 NPPA
Awardl The ontriel ' hown
wore judged belt in tolovi·
slon nowo photography 11
thla year'a National Press
Photographer's Auoclation in Fargo, North Oekota. (60 min.!
· 111 Bonny Hill Show
IHIOI MOVIE: 'Fortreta'
(()CI
11 :0&amp; ()J Portrait of Amerlce:
Kentucky
11:1&amp; ill•IDI New•
1
1 1:30 el]) (IJ The IIIII of Cer· •
Tonight'l guelta are ..
George Segal, George
Miller and Buddy Rich. (80
min.) (AI. In Stereo.
I]) 8portaCentar
(I) WKRP In Clnolnnotl
•
(I) Remlntton ltoole

•s

+

10 All over
17 Consume
20 Exude
21 Paddle Z8 Jalopy
22 Quallfted 21 Klt.chen

89 "This -

Hoose"
prtntempa B3 Soar
..Qunct
( 1954 song)
18 Deput ' 24 Soda pop 31 Trouble
.W Egyptian
U Sleeping
nevor
31 Avwic:e
deity
setup
26 Swab
:U Think
41 · - Marta"
25 Knight's Z7 AJtor
81 Cabinet
42 Hall
R8l'b
constelpost
a score
28 French city
latlon
3e Concerning « King (Lat.)
29 Polluted
SO By mouth
31 Farceur

32 Perfection

3' Palm leaf
37 Female rurr
38 Sylvan
deity
39Eared
'II Primitive

h-+-+-

group
46 Bulwark
48 Mortlse
Otting

47Revioe
48 Bring
to bear
DOWN
1 Duplicate
2 F881ening

a

13&amp;1 .

comp .. 1300. Coli &amp;14·246·
fi0&amp;2 .

I u rpluJ · Carhart -Army-Denlm

Mobllt home lot In Rio Gr•nde;

Get your carpet in ship ehape
with Captain Steamer, fumiture
clee nlng -weter demage work ,

&amp; Heating

112&amp;. Coli 448· · l.u"- houae aoal, limlltOne. short block. Ctll 11• · 4•1·
g,.vet, And delivered, one ton 441,.
ond up. Jim Lonlor, 304-8781971 AMC Matedor, Pl. PB,
7387 or 1715·1247 .
AC. 4 dr. Col 81~ · 21e · 1891 .
46 Spaca for Rent

tfta r 8PM.

. (ARSWO[I tomorroW)

A peek
at finesses

a

Rottry or cable tocl drilling .
Most wells completed samed1y.
Pump uhtt and IBNice. 304-

82

64 Hey &amp; Grain

pd.

Noil, Gallipolis. Coif ~8 · 4418

I l I J( I I I J

A "OUAGK" SHOT

lowed on a war exerciae
just minutet from the Rus·
sian border. (60 min .)
II]) Treaoure Hcu111 of Bri-

Lite Modll IN Ford tractor. 4 • rlenced carpenter, electrici an,
spd, crttm puff, not uNci herd, 4 ' !'"uon, painter. roofing (lnclud- .
newtlrn. t199&amp;. Ca11114·288· •ng hot tar eppllcation) 304-

441t after 7pm.

Mobil• home lot, 12'•80' ot
IMalltr, t76 wettr peld; 4th A

.

Sa'urday s

pany of Merinos io fol-

RINGLES'S SERVICE , o•po·

8~22 .

mur~

der. (60 mln.IIR).
CIJ MacNeil-Lehrer Newahaur
II]) Wonderworka (CC) A

GONNA GET OUTA ~IS FIX,
WE'VE GOT TO GET RIO OF

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

AKC REg. Lha.. Apao puppl1.1,

trig .• share beth, mate preferrld.

APARTMENTS FOR RENT:

2101 Jackson Ave., 2 bed·
rooms, blth, kttchen anti living
room. renter payJelectric, 1250
per month plus depo•it.
1410 Ohio. 1 bed room, living
room-kitchen combination and
bath. Renter peya electric tnd
weter, 1200 per month plul
deposit.

Ford Cu110mlzed nn, good
1hepe. U.896 . Call 814-448:

9790 .

e

rabtutlng, til "'"' of gun1mtth
work. f11t Hrvlea, 304·171-

Houttkeeplng room , l'lftOL ,..

utllhl•

7:06 C5) Rocky Road In Stereo.
.7:30 D ril CIJ Now Newlywed
Game
Cil Please Don't Eat Dol1let
I]) Tennis: 1986 Mlcholob
Light I Stove Garvey
Sparta Cloeaic
·
CZJ Ill CIJ Jooperdy
ill Nightly lualnlll Report
® Whool of Fortune
IIIIHI Price Ia Right
fJI WKRP In Cincinnati
(H80! Fragglo Rock: Grepea
of Generoalty (CC)
7:3&amp; (]) Sanford and Son ·
8:00 D ril College Baok.otball:
Kentucky vt. Vlrolnla Mil~
tary lnodtuta
I]) Born. Free
(I) til ()21 Gator Bowl: FlorIda State vo. Oklehoma
Stoll
C7J MOVIE: 'Tribute' (CC)
CIJ ® &amp;o.recrow and
Mrs. King Amanda a1tempts to help when tho
leader of an environmental

78 Chevy ven 87,000 mi. caD
eve. after 5:30 614-446-3243 ..

UB. Coli 81 4·448-0481 .

814-448-0322

•n.oo. 814·949-:iolo.

PMt-wer#Hn:t

Now arrange the circled letl~ to
form tne ourprilltl ..,_, u aug·
geated I&gt;Y 1ne above conoon.

SCTV Nelwork

Ill ()21 Divorce Court
fll Jolforaono

V-8 . Coli e14·246-9214 or
e14 ·24&amp;-&amp;693.

Briarpnch Kennell All-brHd
grooming . Adults &amp; J,Uppies.
English Cocker Spanl 1. 388·

'h Bugle &amp; 'h Collie &amp; Huskey
pup1. Jull bHn weaned , 110
eteh. Reo. black &amp; •liver Ptki·
""' no PIPifl, 7 monthl old,

UHd Fumtture -· DriiHr, • btd.

2 bedroom furnished opt. In .Cell 814-448-0373.
Middleport . Allutllltleepeid. Call
814·992-5084.
For ule Klndltwood stove,
APARTMENTS, mobile hom ...
housn. Pt. Plea.. nt and Oalllpo·

I

-ro 1)0 ·n·u&amp;.

Peter

II]) MecNeii·Lehrer Newahour '

78 Ford F-260 4x4 , 4 1pd., air,

. 6071 .

Furnished ept. 920 4th Ave.,
Galllpoli1. one bdr., *2150, lltill·

t12fi mo. Co11814-48 -9ee2.

tLAIHNE

tJ

® Eyewltneaa Nowa

Vans &amp; 4 W.O. ·

896·3802

~48 · 1368

314 3rd. St., Kanauga . Call

73

266·6417.

7PM.

ceb+nets, 13&amp;0. Gaa or electric
r8ngea t371 . Baby Mlttresns.

63

rr

1

H! IJTOOf"t5

i.OW SI!CAUCSE
HI'&amp; AIIIXIOUS

CZJ II CIJ Whool of Fortuna
(J)

uHd bedroom aultea. renget,

ltOVH,

with

ISHRUPEj

O'Toole .

Olive St., OalllpoHs. New. ulld
wood·coalstove•. 8pcwood LA
IUite t398, tiunk beda 1199,
lntron rec:Knet.
rww &amp;

614-246·6811 .

. tin paid, adults. Call 441-441 8
tfter 7PM.
Furnished hou11, 241 Jackson
• Pike. Gallipolis, UOO water
Nice 2 bdr apt, 4 mil11 from
· paid , 2 bdr. Call4·t8· 4411 after
Gallipolis. sto\la, refrlg .• • wtter
7PM.
furnished., 8200 mo . No P.tt.
Coll614 · 4~6 - 8038 .
3 bdr., larg1 kitch.n, nice utility
room, ' 1 car garage, t291S mo.
Apt. for rent In Henderson, WV,
Ref . &amp; dip required . Call-814-

23

Professional
Services

61· Household Goods

~92e .

L.erge house and apertmen1,
unfurnished. 304·176-13815 .

2282.

FURNITURE . B.cts , lro"· wood.
cupboard •. chain, ch11U ,
b11ket1, dlahn. atone j1u, an gold and titver. Wrltt·
MINer, Rt.2, PomeroY.

conv. loe~tlon, Upper RIYtr Rd ..
Wtler paid , l _tC. dtp, Nquired.

Why PlY double price? We build
btg • bdr. EertvAmerlcanHomes
818, 9915. New modtlopen. Call

676·3100

coal heater.1. SWAIN 'S FURNI·
TURE, 3rd. &amp; 011\le St. OaltlpcTOP CASH paid far '83 model
end newer UJICI cart. Smith
Bulck· Pontia c, 191' ~ litem
Ave., Oellipolia. Cell 814-448 -

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE e2

814-379-2268.

814-1192·3061 .

WANTED TO BUY vied wood &amp;

Cell 614-446·3169.

2 bdr. fully fumiahed, 12xSIS,

Pork. Call 614-448-1802.

room. fully carplted 6 remo·

Will care tor the elderty in my
ho,..., Call814·992·2483.

61 1·44e-1099.

Wanted To Buy

1----------

614-BBe-731 1.

womtn In my home. Exp•·
rienced c•re. reesonlble rates.

LOST t UO Cllh in Ohio B1nk
•nvelope, Tues. Dec. 24th 1t
3rd. Ave. Foodland Grocery
Stq re. If found ple11e call

Furnished, AC, cable, no c ity
ttJtes, blluttful rtvar viWII' In
Kenaugil . .Fosters Mobile Home

Cool Co. Col!e14-44e-140B.

1980 Ubarty 14.&amp;4. 2 bed·_ 4•1·274.15 or leave m•,.D•·

BE A PART OF THE NEIGH·
BOAS HElPING NEIGHBORS

Coli 814-887-5329.

Buck loy. 81 4· 88~ · 4781

turn ~ .

1seo Liberty 14•&amp;4, 2 br
fuH·tlmo benoflu. Coll 304·876· unfurnished. vinyl underpenning
3980., 1-800·842·3819.

Hou11 coal. Lump &amp; stoker. Zinn

for Rent

Vtcancy for elderly men or

6 Lost and Found

Hours:12·9 p.m.

for Sale

DIVIDUALS . Pert-tlmajobawith ,

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

YOUNG'S

32 Mobile Homes

ASK THE ARMY NAnONAl MOBILE HOMES MOVED: i11·
GUARD RECRUITER ABOU1 lured,
reetontble rttn, Call
VACANCIES FOR QUALIFIED 304-678-233e
PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE IN·
1

Vacancy for the llderty in our
home . Trained end fifteen yean
e:~~.perlence . Call 114-992 ·

Giveaway

Puppiea to gh11 1w1y. Approx . 7
weekt old. Oobtrmln &amp; PU Bull.

1~ .

304-e7fi-88&amp;e.

1982 Cloyton, UX&amp;fi, fully

33482.

9

location. manv po•llbliti• 2
l1rg1 loti, mid t ·7 0'•· Call

e...,

INSIDE YARD SALE

4

7 room and bath hai..11, located
208 Fifth St.. New Htven,

Anembly Workl tiOO .QO
per 100.0ueranteed Ptyment.
No Experience-No Sal•. O.ttlls
nnd Hlf·eddrt1Hd ttamped
.,velope: Elen Vital -715 341 B
EnterpriA Ad, Ft. Pltrct, FL

Cle•n•r. one half milt up
Georg.. Creek Rd. C1ll 81•·

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE .

Jr., 304·fi78·233e.

Trolnlng provided. 1-81 2-938· 304-182-2748 .
8170. Mon.-Fri. SAM 10 6PM Urge charming older home. 8li:C.
CST.

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

10-8-tfc

By OWMr. StlttiV, 3 bl;droom
hou11 at 10 E. St. In Pom'"'Y· 5
wooded acres, femlly room.
dining room, F.A. hilt, 2 bartha.
biMment. e~~rtge . t27.000.

current feder1llist.

E••v Auembly Workl 1800.00

LIMESTONE
]~RAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

- -- - , - - , --, -lc-

At. 2 , Athton, Arrli-tgton Hoult,
3 bedrooms, 11ft barth.1, modem
ldtchtn, banment. 1 acre piUL
priced Jn the 40'1. Clyde 8owen,

account•. Full-time

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

992-3410

By owner. Rtmodtlld 3 bed·
roomhou"onRt. 33. NawP.A.
furnace. lirge lot. t23.000.
Collect 81 4·423-82B9.

Govemment Jobs •16,040·

Repa Needed . For bualnn•

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.. ,

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

,Hames for Sale ·

CoiiOCI 814·423-&amp;288.

ta9,230 yr. Now hiring. Cal
BOS-~7 - 8000 Ext. R·4fi82 for

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

31

I I I

EVENING

Jtetring, power bra • . power
windowa. air. auto ., new tlrep ~
Phone304-895 - ~41.

ELBIG

12/30/85

,..
pow,~,

..

THAT ICIIAIIILED WORD GAME
Hen~ Arnold ond Sob Leo

Television
Viewing

1985 Ford. EICCrt , .4 IP, bl,t,'k

In Mlner.WIIe by the Bulk_plant.
-1 _b edroom houH . TC!*-I•I~rle .
Partl1lly furnished, 114-982·

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy,

Autos for Sale

304-67&amp;-3304 or 876·fi2B1 .

no pets. C111 614·388·9713.

.

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

75 Pinto I C, pb, PI· . t800 -,

At. 160, 1300 mo.. *1~0 dop.,

8216 or e14,992·7314.

t
t.

71

'N'CARLYLI

3 bdr, .11A mil• pUt Holzer on

fii.U£. STREAK .CAB CO:-f

..... '

Monday, Decf!mber 30, 1985

Pomerov- MiqdlepQrt, Ohio

bolt

8 PUblic
warehouse L....L-..L....I......I"-

DAILy CRYPTOQU01'1!li- Here't bow to work 't :
AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW

One letter stands for anolher. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,

apostrophes the length and fonnatlon mthe words are all
hints. Each dey the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
12-30

.'

VKHHSPJJJ
EVYFQDV

XSXP ' E
FHIP . -

Yeet.erdlr'•

K
RPF8

NFVP

c,,,...._,

JPIKRJ

s

XFFY

ZF Q

Z F Q

p

G I WE

OKYYZ U FYI
THE WORLD CANN&lt;Yf

LIVE AT THE lEVEL OF n'S GREAT MEN. - JAMES G.

FRAZER

e Ounamok.o

12:0&amp; (I) MOVIE: '1-kfllt II
Tlffeny'a'
12:15
III Ep on Hallywoocl
12:30
(2) CZJ t.at. Nlaht with
David Utt&amp;rman 'fonlght'a
gu1111 111 LIM Ellbocher
1nd comic maglcllnl Penn
II Teller. (80 min.) IR). In
Sttreq, . •
(I) 8111 Colby Show •
(!) C)u1dOor Lilli M...1lna
Hoe~ by William Conrad.
&lt;1J AIC NMt Nlghtllne

I

(I) MOVIE: .'SocondHIInd HMrta'
.
12:311 [HIOI MOVIE: 'Juat lhe ·
WaLifOU Ail' (CC)
.
12:41 • (!JI NIWI
1:00 I]) Wenciy and Me
I]) 8uporboull Ken Norton
... Muhammad All (San .
Diego, March, 1873). (80
min .)
Aoeltll Bunker'a PIMOVIE: 'lcMiramouohe'
C1J1 CNN Newa
1:111
1:20 [MAXI MOVIE: 'ChHoh and
Chong'a NICI o-m•'
•

I

�'el

This
Week's
Games

MUZZLE
LOADING .
.
all(l HUNTING SUPPUES.

Southern beaten

\

•.

•

at y

I :.

Vol.36, No.179
Copyrighted 1986

Jan. 3-Symlllls Va•y ................ Away
Jan. 4-WaltaNa .........................·.away
Jan. 10-Ealfem .......................... Away

•

EASTERN
BOYS IASIUBALL
Ja&amp; 3-0ak 1111 ........................... Away
Jan. 10-Southern ........................ H01111
Jan. 14-North Gallia ................. Away

GilLS IASIETIALL
Jan. 2 ~oak HII ............................ Hom.
Jan. 9-Southern ........" ............... Away
Jan. 13 -North Gallia -................H-

S·.

:

·.·.4~,~·--1".
~-?~
'.

.,. . OlDS... , I-'
' CAD.
CHEVY~ IN(.. ..~
.,

Ben H. (wing·Director.

PH. 992-2121
108 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

FOR

HOME PEOPLE''
.,

j~
-=·
T

RACINE, OHIO 4$17'1

SYRACUSE OFFICE
992~6333

RACINE OFFICE
949-2210

BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 26- EASTERN' '
Nov. 29-GALLIPOLIS
.
Dec. 3-At Kyger Creek'
Dec. 6- OAK HILL'
Dec. 1O-At North Gallla'
Dk. 13- At Hannan Trace'
Dec. 20- SOIITHWESTERN •
Dec. 30- Peebles

(at Chillicothe)
Dec . 28-At Southeastern
Jan. 3- At Symmes Valley'
Jan. 4- At Wahama
Jan . 10-At Eastern•
Jan. 14- Kygor Creek"
Jan. 17- At oak Hill"
Jan . 24 - NORTH GALLIA' .
Jan. 2&amp; ~At Ravenswood
Ja. 28- WAHAMA
Jan. 31 - HANNAN TRACE'
Feb. 7- At Southwestern'
Feb. 14- SVMIIIIES VALLEY'
"- SVAC games

·Eastern
BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 26 - At Southern'
Doc. 3-NORTH· GALLIA'
Doc. &amp;- At Hannan Trace'
Dec. 10-Kygar Creek'
Dec. 13- Southwestern'
Dec. 20- SYMMES VALLEY'
Dec. 21 - FEDERAL HOCKING
Dec. 27 - At Waham. Tournament
' Eastern VB. Wirt
Wahame VB . Gilbert
Dec. 28-At Wahame Toumamant
Consolation Game
Championship Game
Jan. 3-At Oak Hill"
Jan. t 0-SOUTHERN' .
Jan. 14-At North Gallia'
Jan. 17- HANNAN TRACE'
Jan. 21-PKBG . CATHOLIC
Jan. 24 - At Kyger Creek*
Jan. 31 - SOUTHWESTERN'
Feb. 4- At Federal Hod&lt;ing
Feb. 7 - At Symmes Valley'
Feb. 8- WAHAMA
.
Feb. 14- OAK HILL •
• - SVAC ga mea

.

.

"Vo111 O"l•t 011 '

76• Rlr~t"

l GliAl PLACE
fOI n•llfASI

LUIICM &amp; 11111•

lot of counties not only In !lluthern and southeastern
Ohio, rut statewide which are In very poor financial
condltkm," Jones reported. .
Questioned aboUt the po5slbUity r4 the Meigs
County Commlsslonen~ putting a·sales tax nto effect
In 198i, Jones Is of the opinion thatthlswW rot happen.
He pointed out that the county commissioners do
have th8t poWer oot locally are tcylng evety way to
stay away !rom that action.
"We are one d the seven counties lett in the state
which does l)Ot have a sales tax," Jones stated.
"Wewould want to makesurebelorewewould ever
go In that direction that there detlnltely Is a reed, and
also that we would know what we would bedolngwlth
the additional money. We would Uke to develop a
program If It would ever rome to that and I'm rot sure
that It ever wlll," Jones stated.
. Jones pointed · out It Is the commissioners'

responsibility to control the llnanres r1 the county and
It Is all;o their responslbUlty to lnfonn the pobUc.
"If the time would ever come when I could see that
down the road, we're heading In the direction d need

where we have to have additional rmney, I would
have no hesitation In puttlngthatouttothe people. But
that time Isn't now. l could come, oot 1 don't foresee It
In the near ruture," Jones said.
Big Wheel, big help
Speaking generally on the past year, Jones said the
coming of Big Wheel with a $2 million ck&gt;llar
Investment was an accomplishment and that the
lxlard Is always making effort to bring rmre ooslness
to Meigs County.
A number 1 priority for 198615 to name an economic
development director to work m behalf d the rounty
In encouraging new business and Industry.
Discussing collecting bargaining, Jones com-

mented that Meigs County at this point has not be
affected much by legislation.
"We've tried on our own the best we can and we
treat our employees In a manner that discourages
them from becoming too Involved with collective
bargaining, Jones commented.
"We're not oneofthe hlgherpaylngcountles, but we .
have come a long way In the past five years, and we
are at a point where weare about equal with counties
comparable In size," he said.
Jones credits the good llnanclal condition of the
county to office holders. Many of the clftclals do have
needs, but they all;o have used good judgement and
kriowlng the condition of the county. They try 1o be
cooperative and go along wlth the board In holding
do'"1! expenses.
"I compliment for that," he remarked.
- Continued on Page 11

Southern
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20 - At Trimble Tournament
Waterford VB. Eastern
Southern VB. Trimble
Nov. 23 - At Trimble Tournament
Consolation game
Championship geme
Nov. 2&amp; - At Eastern•
Dec . 2-KYGER CREEK'
Dec . 5- At Oak Hill'
'
Oec. 9- NORTH GALLIA'
Dec . 12- HANNAN TRACE'
Doc . 19- At SouthwMtern•
Jan . 2-SVMMES VALLEY'•
Jan. 9- EASTERN'
Jan . 11 - GALLIPOLIS
Jan . 13 - At Kyger Creak'
Jan. 16- 0AK HILL•
Jan . 21-At Gallipolis'
Jan. 23 - At North Gellie
Jan. 30- At Hannan Trace'
Feb. 3- At Symmes Valley'
Feb . &amp;- SOUTHWESTERN
•- SVAC gamea

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20- At Trimble Toumament
Waterford VB. Eastern
Southern vs. Trimble
Nov. 21-MEIGS
Nov. 23- At Trimble Tournament
Consolation game
Champio,.hip game
Nov. 24~ SOUTHERN'
Dec . 2- At North Gallia'
Dec. 5- HANNAN TRACE'
Dec. 9- At Kyger Greek'
Dec. 12- SOUTHWESTERN'
Dec . 14- FEDERAL HOCKING
Dec. 19- At Symmes Valley'
Jan. 2- 0AK HILL'
Jan. 9- At Southern'
Jan. 1-1- NORTH QALLIA'
Jan. 18- At Hannan Trace'
Jan. 18- At Melge
Jan. 23- KYGER CREEK'
Jan. 30- At Southwestern'
Feb. 1- At Federel Hocking
Feb. 3- At Oak Hill'
Feb. II- SYMMES VLALEY'
' - &amp;VAC gamao

Gallia man dies
in tractor accident
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallla County man was kllled Monday afternoon
· when the farm tractor he was operating overturn~ on Boggs·Lincoln
Road .
James E. Allbright , 42, of Rt. 1, Northup, was pronounred dead at the
scene following the 5: 15 p.m. accldel!t by Gallla County Coroner Dr.
. Donald Warehime, according to the Gallla County Sheriffs Department.
Deputies sald Allbright, his !llnJames Allbright, father DaUas Allbright
and David Maasle were haUling shelled corn from Jolln!lon Road across
lloai!·Llncoln Road to the Dallas Allbright !ann m Ohio 775.
Allbright reportedly started up a b1ll when his tractor apparentlY started
sUding back down the b1ll oo an icy surface. The tractor and wagon slid off
the left side of the road and overturned, pinning Allbright beneath the
vehicle.
Allbright's body was released to Willis Funeral Home c1 Gallipolis.
'

PH. r99J;6614
308 E. lAIN· '
POMEROY,• QH. ·
'

"COME GIO

WITH us·•

Eastern

'HOME BANK

MEMBER FDIC

Southern

:

"DIGNITY AND
SERVICE ALWAYS''

26 Conti·

A Multlmedie Inc. N«'Wipaper

~~'!"""'!'

BOYS SCHEDULE

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 21 - At Eastern
Nov. 30- MILlER"
Dec. 5- At Nelsonville-York"
Dec. 9 - VINTON COUNTY•
Dec. 12- TRIMBLE'
Dec. 16- ALEXANDER•
Jan. 4- At Warren•
Jan. &amp;- WELLSTON'
Jan. 9- FEDERAL HOCKING'
Jan. 11 - At Miller•
Jan. 18- NELSONVILLE·YORK'
Jan. 18- EASTERN
Jan. 20- At Vinton County•
Jan. 23 ~ At Trimble'
Jan. 27- BELPRE '
Jan. 30- At Alexander'
Feb. 3- WARREN'
Feb. 6- WELLSTON'
Feb. 1O- At Federal Hocking
·- rvc gameo

By BOB HOEFU(]I

Unlike some Ohio Cou!ltles, Meigs County Is In
stable Hnanclal condition aitd wW end 1l*l5 "In the
-black".
This report was given by Meigs County Commls·
.sioner Richard Jones Monday afternoon while
commenting on the overall picture in Meigs County at
the end of another year:
· Re!errlng to the financial condition of the county,
Jones said:
"lt's not exceptionally good, oot It's certalnly far
from being as bad as a lot r1 counties are. We wW end
the year In the black and we wlll have a carry over
balancelntothenewyear. Wewtlllmowtheamountof
the canyover next week," Jones commented.
"Meigs Is fortunate going on what I read In t1ie
newspapers and meetings I attend, I think there are a

Jan. 11-Galllpolit ........................ HOIIII

Meigs

1 Section, 14 Pogot

Pomeroy. Middleport, ·ohio, Tuesday) December 31, 1986

Sentmel !!tall writer

GilLS BASIETIALL
Jan. 2-Symmts Ya•y ................. Hon.
Jan. 9-lastem .............................H-

EWING
FUNERAL
HOME-

en tine

Meigs has stable financial condition

BOYS BASIEYBAIL

• - TVC games

Story, photo on Page 11

I ,

rio

SOUTHERN.

BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 22- At Athena
Nov. 29- At Millar'
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 Wellston'
Jan. 7-At Federal Hod&lt;ing•
Jan. tO - MILLER'
Jan . 14- At Nelsonville-York'
Jan . 17- VINTON COUNTY'
Jan. 21-TRIMBLE'
Jan. 24 - At Belpre'
Jan. 28 - ALEXANDER'
Jan. 31 - At Warren'
Feb. 7- WELLSTON'
Feb. 13- FEDERAL HOCKING'

Photo on Page 8

!.

Jan. 9-Fedtral Hocking ............... H-

Meigs

Final day for CJ

;{:

GilLS BASimAIL
Jan. 4-Wanen Local................... Away
Jan. 6-Wellston ........................... Hotne

·"Your Athletic
Shoe Headquarters"

New Year's float
!

-·

Jan. 3-Wellston .......................... Away
Jan. 7 -Federal Hocking .............. Away
Jan. 10-MI.r ..............................HOI8e

~..,

'

'

BOYS IASIETIAIL

' ;. 7i30' DJn. te 4:00 .m.

Story, photo on Page 10

McJy 1Q66 be rodlont with
lo... and frl•ndlhlp.

MEIGS

Mon. thru Fri.
7:3'0 a.m. te 5:00 p.m.

Crazed gunman killed

DPPY
In YEAR

Story on 1'1111! 3,

·,,,

·HOUIS:
·,;.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

J...

~

~

.....

~

a:_., AS

FARMERS

BANI

&amp; SAVINGS CO.
POMEIIOY, OIL

PH. 992·2136

RAWLINGS·
'
C:OlTS·

. BlOWER
FUNERAl
HOME
IIUCIR.FISIII
hlllOWEt

''llwl• , ......

AHMIIf• to Dtfllf"
992·5141
•otEPOIT, ott.
•

'

Jellrey

ear-.

Jotm MUIIel'.

Mary Hob!IAltler

Ada Neue.

Economic improvment tops wish list
Some tax breaks
·expire at midnight
By BOB H.OEFLICII
Sentinel slalf wrller

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Con·
gress, rushing to adjourn for the
oolldays, refused to extend some
tax provisions that expire at
midnight, Including those affecting
jo~ for minorities and special
consideration lor widows of .VIetnam War MIAs.
Also set to expire Is an exemption
from Social Security taxes lor
retired federal judges working as
senior jurists t.o keep active and
reduce the backlog of cases crowdIng court ~ets.
A four cent per gallon exemption
from fuel excise taxes for taxis which some members of Congress
wanted restored - was also
rejected.
The Senate and House,ln a bitter
back-and-forth battle In the final
days, rescued only two explrtng tax
provisions - the 16 cent-a-pack
levy on cigarettes and a freeze on
Medicare payments for doctors and
hospitals.
These two provisions were ex·
tended untU March 15.
But many others, some with
far-reaching Impact such as tax
credits lor research and development, expire al mldnlght tonight.
There was no Indication at the lime
Congress adjourned as to When or If - they would be extended on a
retroactive basts.
Rep. Dan Rostenkowksl, [). Ul ..
chairman of the House Ways and
Means Committee, llrst offered a
package of ·16 extensions, some ol
them changing the tax code to
reflect the sweeping tax m'orm bill
lhe House had enacted earlier In the
week.
Included In the Rostenkowskl
package were restoratbn ol the
MIA provision, which lor tax

puJllOSeS treats widows of men
classified as missing in action In
VIetnam as If their spouses were
alive, and the special fUel tax
exemption for taxis. which ex~red
Sept. :ll.
That propt6al was rejected by
Rostenkowskl's House colleagues
and threatened to set r1f a flllooster
In the Senate.
Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas,
said of the changes: "I, for one
would not like to see that happen."
Bentsen, who introdured legislation extmdlng 13 tax provisions,
said, "The Finance Committee and
the entire Senate soould have a
chance to review carefuUy the
extensive changes made by Ways
and Means In such IJ'OVIslons as the
R&amp;D credit and the energy credits
before we approve them lor even a
short period."
Rostenkowskl then offered the
same package, providing 16 unchanged extensions through March
15, which he said would cost about
$500 million more than his original
proposal.
But in Increasingly acrimonious
jousting betwren tbe House and
Senate. the package was redured to
the two extensions - tbe cigarette
tax and the Medicare payments.
Allowed to lapse even before
Congress adjourned was a tax
credit for helping workers hurt by
trade lmbalanres. tbe Trade Adjustlnent Act, and the power to
bolTOW from the RaUroad Retirement Fund•
Some provisions - such as
extension d the special Social
Security status for, retired judges
and thP' van pooling exclusion were In the Bentsen blU that was

Philippi, W.Va., .-1 Old Ben's
Indiana division wW lay df 90
workers at Its two surface mines
near OaklaDd City, Ind.
About Z10 miners wlll remain on
the job at the Kltt mine and about
1m at the Indiana mines.
Musulln said the layoffs are ilr
an Indefinite period.

•'

Jol)n Musser, Pomeroy
ooslnessrnan:
"My wishes are lor good
bealth and peace ol mind for
each and every human being
that God has created. I hope
evecyone Is able to achieve their

personal goals and resolutions

for the new year.loope l9861s a
most prosperous year for area
businesses and unemployment
Is beld to a mlnlmum.l also bope
the Marauders remain undefeated and that Coach Cbanrey
returns In the fall. Give me
strength to survive the diet plans
for the new year."

Macy Hobstetter, Rutland,
Meigs Commlsslolll'rs' Clerk:
"I lx&gt;pe that Meigs County wUI
see more economic development In '86 t.o strengthen rur tax
base, provide gainfUl employ·
ment lor our citizens and reduce
the welfare rolls. I would like to
see Meigs County become a
place where our children could

plan to stay and make a good
fUture lor themselves with all r1
the advantages r4 job opportunities, recreational facUlt ies and
cultural exposure.
Ada Nease, Pomeroy business
woman:

"In the year oll986, my hopes
are that we, the people ol Meigs
County, will promote our county
as a recreational and tourtsm
. center. We have beautiful hills
and the Ohio River which offer
hunting, hiking, boating, water
sidling, canoe trips, fishing and
boat excursions. I want us to
beautify and restore our river
towns and make our county a
place where people can come to
escape the stress of city life."

Leading indicators show tiny economic growth
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
gQvernment's main gauge of ruture
economic actlvlty rose a tiny 0.1

percent lit November, Indicating smallest gain since June's 0.1 new year.
''I'm not expecting the eronomy
modestgrowthlorthe new year, the percent Increase, after rising In
Commerce Department said evecy month this year except April. to take off In tlle llrst quarter (of
, The Reagan administration Is 1986)," said analyst L. Douglas Lee
Monday.
The Index of leading Indicators, forecasting overall growth of about of the Washington Analysis Corp.
which Is supposed to forecast 4 percentfor 1986. but many prtvate · "I'm expecting a modest quart er
economic activity within about economists believe the economy with the economy looking stronger
three to six months, sbowed Its wlll get off to a sluggish start In the as the year progres.;es."

1,360 HEAP applications received.
More than 1,360 applications have
been taken In Gallla and Meigs

never considered~

Miners face layoffs
LEXINGTON, Ky. (UP!) Today Is the last day of work for
nearly 190 miners at two coal
mining subsidiaries r1 the Standard
on Co. (Ohio) .
Mike Musulln. spokesman forOtd
Ben Coal Co., said 99rnlnerswlU be
laid off at Kltt Energy Co.'s
undetiii'Otlnd Kltt No. 1 mine near

Apparently Meigs Countlans
are anxious to see an Improvement In the .economic conditions
of the county.
Four residents were asked
about their hopes for the county
In 193&gt; and three of them brought
the economic aspects Into their
replles while the fourth also
lmpUed that the financial condition of the county can be
enhanred by tourism. ,
"What are your bolies lor
Meigs County In 1986? " was the
question directed to the four and
here are their replJes.
Jeffrey Carson, Ohio UniverSity student:
"My hopes are that with so

many people out of work, the
economy wlll Improve making
job opportunities rmre abund·
. ant. Also, I hope that Meigs
County wtll soon Invest In a new
clnema-ente~talnment center
for Its citizens. This would keep
rmney usually spent outside r1
the county lor entertainment In
the county boosting growth that
much rmre. But, most of aU I
wish health and happiness to tbe
peopled Meigs CountY.'"

NEW ODC SUPERJNTEND.
ENT - Pamela JL Mature has
beett ~ lllpl!l'lntatcleat ol
the Gllllpol!e Dev~eatal
Center. MUura, ol Bidwell, had
~ed . . . . . . aupemtenclettl
of lite center Rice July 2. She
came lo the center tn 198&amp; as
PfOIJ'IIDI dlredot after worilmg
three )'1!111'8 u a elleal l'ellpt'&amp;
leltlallve for 0uan111111 8en1cel

Umlled.

Counties during the first two
months ol the HEAP Emergency
Assistance Program. according to
the Gallla·Meigs Community Ac·
tlon Agency.
Benefits totaling rmre than
$240,00) have been processed for
eligible applicants In the two county
area.
.
Gallla-Meigs CAA Is the local
delegate agency for the federally
tunded program designed to help
eligible low-income housemlds
meet the high cost d winter
heating. The erroe•getcy program
Is to provide assistance to ellgtble
applicants facing utWty shut-off or
those with a 10 day of less tuel
supply. The maximum benefit Is
S'JJO per household.
AppUcatlons tor the regUlar
HEAP Protlram are available at
CAA offices, county department d

human services, senior cltlwl
centers, JXJSt oiDces and various
other public places throughout both
counties.
EUglble applicants for both pro·
grams must fall below the 150
perrent federally established Income guidelines of $7,875 lor a one
person oousehold plus $2,700 for
each additional hou sehold
member.
Gallla-Meigs CAA Outreach and
HEAP staff are available to help
people 1111 out apllcatlons at tbe
Central Office In Cbeshlre, the
GaUla County Outreach Ofllce at
m Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, and
the Meigs County Outreach Office
In the courtlxluse at Pomeroy.
AppUcatlon deadline lor regular
HEAP Is Januacy 31, 1986 and the
Emergency Assistance Program Is
Aprllll, 19116.
For nx&gt;re lnfonnatlon
4460611 or 367·'734lln Gallla County or

call

•

992-5605 or !IJ2-6629 tn Meigs County.
Meanwhile, ttr Public Utiilllcs
Commission of Ohio has approved
an experimental home weatherization program for 15,000 low-Income
natural gas customers ol the
Columbia Gas of Ohio, East OhiQ
Gas Co., Dayton Power &amp; Light Co.,
and Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co.
The wcatherl7.allon, to be completed by 1987, will cost $7.5 mllllon
at an average ol $500 per home, but.
Is expected to pay for ttsell In slx
years with redured tuel costs.
Famllles with an annual Income
d $15,!1'15 or less will be eligible.
The PUCO also approved a
smaU-scale weatherization program for low-Income electric customers starting next March 10. '
Cust.omers woo apply with their
electric company wlll receive free :
energy audits and weather stripping caulking and plastic window
sheets valued at up to $185.

'

�</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="41812">
            <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="41811">
              <text>December 30, 1985</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3237">
      <name>goett</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3619">
      <name>harrah</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="335">
      <name>sayre</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4024">
      <name>schorn</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="582">
      <name>weber</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
