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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.

'

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..•

(:ommentary
'

.

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Courl Slreel

.;

Pomeroy, Ohio

: 11EVOTI.l D TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON /\REA
.•
•

·..·
.·:•
·!
•

, ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

••
••
.•

PI\T WHITEHEAD
;(sslstant Publisher/ Controller

::

,:
:.•
•

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

Di\LE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor

•

:.. LEITERS or OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
leftlg. All lertPrs art' subj ec t 10 E'dlllng and musttK&gt; slgned with name, address and
tileph one number . No unsig ned lett ers wlll tx&gt; published. Letters should be ln

poo tas!e,

addrl'ssln~

Issues, not

Southern

·The long view

•

.•

.

perso~a lltles.

•

Chief Justice decries
(J.s. 'judicial deficit'
•

:Too few judges and a backlog cl cases have caused a "judicial deficit"
could be alleviated If the president and the Senate acted quickly to !Ill
v~~ancles on the bench, Chief Justice Warren Burger said Monday.
··:Federal judges are working longer hours and more days than ever
b&amp;fore but, like Allee in Wonderland, they cannot run fast enough even to
· sill¥ in the same place," Burger said In his annual year-end report on the
Judiciary.
:'fhe backlog of cases has developed in the lower courts, partially due to
s16wness in filltng 85 new federal judgeships authorized In July 1984,
Bprger sald. One year after the authorization, 56 cl the new postilions had
00( been fUled, along with 41 regular vacancies, he said.
~:1 have urged the president and the Senate to speed up the process and
h4ve urged sitting judges to give ample advance ootlce ol their Intention to
r~ or to take up senior status," he said. "We, bave also urged oorne
ll'lE!Ihod of creating judgeships tbat can better anticipate needs, rather than
r8act to them."
ti'he Senate, which must approve those nominated to federal judgeships,
h.itS dragged Its feet on the nominations. Senate Democrats oppose many cl
tJ1{&gt; Reagan nominees for political reasons, fearful of the conservative
stimp they might put on the judiciary. Democrats, in the minority In the
~ate, also charge some ol the Reagan appointees are Incompetent.
i5owever. Burger's concern Is that, while the nominations langulsh In the
!lenate, the caseload in federal courts Increases.
;.)While the public attention bas focused on our national budget and
~flclt. our judicial deficit ... continues to grow almost unnoticed," he said.
"tven though In 1985 each federal judge disposed of more matters than
!'fer before ... the case loads increased at a faster rate and the backlog of
caSes awaltlngdeclstori- the judicial deficit- grew during the statlstlcal
y~l)r ending June 30, 1985."
;Burger said the number of clvll cases filed at the federal district court
l~ellncreased 5percent and criminal cases rose 7 percent. He added tbat
district court backlogs grew just under 2 percent in civU cases and 12
P'ircent in crfminal cases, and the backlog in the federal appeals courts
ili:reased 9 percent.
~rger also suggested more frequent use of sanctions, such as fines, for
aftilrneys fUing frivolous lawsuits. Since federal court rules were amended
tWo years ago, Burger said, 100 sanctions against attorneys bave been
~ted. He said the "time has come to penalize those few lawyers and
li~ts who treat the judicial system as an arena."
iBe characterized judicial pay as too low, adding, "Altootigh the nation's
t~rest may be served by decreasing government spending, Americans
a~ Ul-served by the folly of inadequate judicial pay."
~e called for development cl prison industries to link private employers
wltll prison systems to give jobs and training to Inmates and to produce
pR!ducts.
.
!•With only five programs operational In five states - In Callfornla,
Kansas. Minnesota, Nevada and Utah-$3,553,553tngrosswageshasbeen
pilp to inmates and $642,545 bas been collected by the states for room and
bOOr&lt;! and state and federal taxes and social security taxes," he said.
••
~t

WASHINGTON - As the old
year goes M and the new year
comes In, let me venture a single
forecast: One of these years (oot
one of these days). Congress wt11
move toward a phasing-out of
Social Security and toward a
pbasing-ln ol 'private programs to
protect us In our retirement years.
This Is an Idea whose time wt11
come.
This won't matertallze in 1986. It
may he a decade or more.
Eventually political considerations
wtll compel Congress to c1fer young
workers, just entering the labor
Ioree, a better option than Social
Security tor their senior years. This
pbaslng-ln won't attect the 36
mllUon persons oow receiving
Social Security benefits; their
benefits wt11 be fully prots:t.ed.
Neither wtlllt affect those workers
oow in their tate 40s and mid-50s.
They wUI get everything oow
promised to them. The prtvattzatton (a dreadful word) wt11 offer an

opportunity to my grandchildren. It people paying Social Security
Is their future tbat concerns me taxes. By the turn of the century,
here.
just 15 years hence, one of every
These thoughts are set In motion five Americans wt11 be more than Qi
in part by an essay by Peter Young, years old.
executive director of the Adam
A pol)tlcal war Is coming. We
Smith Institute in the U.S.A. His bave known these In the past,
article, recently released by the between free states and slave
Heritage Foundation, deals with states, between farm and city,
pending proposals for a gradual between protective tariffs and the
privatization of a part of Great · mctrtnesctfreetrade.ThelmpendBritain's social security program. lng poUttcal war will he between
Whatlsgolngontherelsaportentcl young and old. The relatively
wbat wtll bappen here.
young, who wt11 be paying manOur program and the Brits' strous, punitive taxes .on the!r
program bave much In common. wages, will be rebelling against
Both retirement systems operate financing benefits for their parents
under an illusion and a r~ty. The and grandparents. They will detiiusionlstbatsomenebulous"trust mand an alternative for
fund" protects future benefits; the themselves.
reaUty Is· that iJ1 both nations, the
Great Britain Is putting out
systems are virtually pay-as-we-go. Jeelers In just this direction. Over
Taxes come In; benefits go out. the years our cousins have created
Both nations took to the same a supplement to their baSk: retiredemographic future: We will bave ment program. It now ts possible
more old folks receiving benefits, tlr British workers ID opt out of a
and we wtll tiave !ewer young partclthesoclalsecuritytaxesthey·

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

------~

-·

otll!rwlse would pay. They and
thelf employers may Instead pay
Into approved 'private pension
plans. It Is a complicated procedure, but roughly bait ol all eltglble
British workers bave chosen to take
the option.
The transition bas bad no effect
on present-day ~· Tllelr
benefits ba\re not been reduced In
any way. Every pension entitle- ·
ment wt11 be honored. Neither wtii
the program hann those workers
wiD already are close to retirement. Men over 50 and women over
45 wtii continue under the present
system.Overat~yearperiod,H

the plan g8Jns parllamentary acceptance, younger workers would "'
move toward paying 4 percent of
their wages (matched by employ·
ers) Into private pension programs
to supplement the baste benefits.
It makes sense. As Peter Young '
observes In his essay, the plan •
would create vast new poolS of : .
!I'IVate capital mr economic devel· .. :
opment. It would serve the cause pf ·
,personal liberty, by giving workers
greater flexlblllty tn planning their
own retirement. Each of these
Super-IRA accounts WOUld be a
valuable personal asset: a worker's
fund balance would accompany .•.
him from job to job; on his death,
the worker would bave something
tangible to leave to his family.
The system of private pensions'
advocated by Young Is essentially ·.
the same system kmg advocated by ·
Peter J. Ferrara, who writes lor the
Cato Institute. Both economists ·
believe that private pension programs are phllosophically and
financially superior to governmental programs. Especially for
blacks, who tend to dle sooner than
whites, private retirement plans
offer tremendous advantages.
The·Brttlshplan, which calls lora
3}-year phasing-in ol supplementary benefits, would barm oo
present retiree: It would greatly
benefit retlrl&gt;es d. the next century.
Great Britain Is mw actively
engaged In debate on the proposition. Our Congress wt11 rxit even
grant hearings on Ferrara's Ideas.
As I concede, the time lor his Ideas
bas not come. Believe me, II wtll
come.

•

-·

record as a coldbtooded Nazi who
performed hideous experiments on
helpless prisoners, one might al·
most feel sorry for this aging
fanatic, who had seen his dreams go
up in smoke. But the dreams were
too stck to Inspire sympathy.
"'lllere are m more elites,"
Mengele mourned in oneolthe tong,
wandering discussions with two
sycophantic German i!IIow extles,
Wolfgang Gerbard and Wolfram
Balsert. "They should exist again.
... Ten toousand Spartans terrorized 300,&lt;ro Helots. Why should
that oot be possible over here?" The
Helots were ancient Greeks ens·
laved by the Spartans who served
as role models for the Nazis.
Mengele's drinking companion,
Gerhard, offered a lugubrious
observation on the sad state of

Brazilian society: "Onty here there
are no Spartans, only Helots."
Mengele agreed. "That's the
problem. The problem Isn't the law
or the masses, but the fact tbat
there are no more giants. That'sthe
question."
A woman's anival with drinks
revived Men~le's splrlts. "Long
live tlx&gt;se who bring us drinks!" he
cried.
The Irony of Mengele's situation
never seemed to dawn on the old
Nazi. He was contemptuous of the
Braztllan society that bad given
him refuge. He apparently COUldn't
bring hlmsell to admit tbat the
racial mixlngtbat was anathema to
the Nazis had produced a robust,
tolerant nation that daily contra·
dieted Hitler's dire predictions of
wbat "mongrellmtlon" must ineyit·

ably brtng.
"The races will always mix,"
Mengele . admitted glumly. ''Nothing positive wt11 be achieved. On
the contrary, the more !hey mix the
more disharmonic they will be."
The mulattoes who make up a
substantial part of the Braztllan
population were singled out mr
Mengele's crooodlle tears. When
blacks and whites lntennan-y, he
said, "the result Is a weaker
mulatto."
Even rrore Ironically,' Mengele,
toward Ill! end of his !He, feU in love
with a Brazilian mulatto and
begged her mcome live with him.
But she declined, maklng It clear
tbat she required a wedding ring as
part cl any arrangl!ment. This was
apparently more tban Mengelewas
wllllng to otter.

The non-league loss leaves
pou1nern wtth an excellent 6-2 rewhtle Peebles lifted Its
fmark to 5-2 overall. ·
see-saw battle that saw
~~~~~~ lead much ol tile way,
I&lt;
to an abrupt IUI'JI·&amp;round at
beginning of the fourtb quarwben with Southern leading
Peebles converted three
~nSE!Cultlve Tornado tul'IIOvers
six points ad a Ci-41 lead.
As a result ol the alternating
-::::::::~~ rule, Southern gained
~
first In the beginning
the final round. The Vi!ttors-,
~.:~~~~~ tied the score wtlen
~
coughed up the ball on
iJilli,Un,cls pass, then IPiwned
more turnovers on tile ensupcissesslons, forclng "SHS· to
catch-up the remainder ol
game.
,
In the opening frame Peebles
,an early three point lead,
Sou thi!rn qufekly gained molme,.tum ,·to t.ke Its first lead of
g~~;;d Tbe scoring teeter-tot·
II
In Indlllll terltory at
conc1uston of the frame as a
trip to the warpath netted
a 16·13 lead.
Altmugb the lead again changed
In the second frame, both
to a
lieat in sroring 15-

Limit Quantities

STORt HOURS
Mon.·Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
S.unday 10 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH;

PRI(ES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JAN. 4, 1986
OPEN NEW YEAR'S DAY 10 A.M. Tll10 P.M .

GRADE A

power
·aowle Caldwell
"Tbey were a solid club and
'shot the ball really well." At one
'point Peebles was a blazing 8 of
!12 from the field, while also hit·
'ttng successive baskets from the
line. .
I Behind the efforts of seniors
!Todd AdafDS and Jay Bostick,
!southern adjusted somewhat the
!second balf to regain the lead at
~1-39. Adams and Bostick took
~urns finding the basket, while
pave Amburgey also compli'mented the attack.
' The opening moments of the nframe rocketed Peebles wwn
victory trall as they went on to
foutSCOI~ !\HS 211-10 for the 61·1Sl fl.
Adams poured In 17 points for
Tornadoes, while Jay Bostick
!added 16 and Amburgey 10. For
winners Rich Kremelns tossed
16 and Brent Arnold addeci 17.
Southern hit 21 of 63 from the
fcir 33 percent and hit 9 of 15
the line for 60 percent. PHS
~anned24 of 56 for a warm43perand netted 13 of 19 from the
for 69 percent.
Southern's reserves continued
winning fashion to boost Its reto 8-9 with a 40-31 triumph.
Baer led with 8 points and
Unger added 8 lor the H In-

·

'

·
'

•

Today in history
llxtay is Tuesday, Dec. 31, te 365th and last day of 1985.

this is New Year's Eve.
Ji,e moon is moving toward Its last qujrter.
The morning stars ars Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
i}le evening star is Jupiter.
those bom on th.:&gt; date are under the sign of Capricorn. They include
F~c h expl011?r Jacq ues Ca rtier In 1491; Frmch painter Hem1 Matisse in
lil&amp;.l; Gen. George Marshall, formulator of the Marshall Aid Plan for
EU!;opc alter World War Tl, In 188J; folk-blues s!n~r Odetta (Holmes) in
19ll (age 55); and singers John Denver in 1943 (age 42), and Donna
Sutiuncr in 1948 (age 371.
O,n this date In history:
In 1879, Thomas Edison gave the first public demonstration of his
in~andescent tamp in Menlo Park, N.J.
Ju 1946, President Harry Truman proclaimed.the dflcl~l end of World
-war 11. more tban one year after the surrender of Germany and Japan.
, :; ift 1972. Pittsburgh Pirates baseball star Roberto Clemente and four
• ot l)gr people were killed In the crash of a chartered cargo plane on a mercy
m~1ton lo earthquake- devastated Nicaragua.
In 1983, the court·ordered breakup of T&amp;T took effect, at midnight.
fi.J984, th e nation's first mandatory seat belt law took effect in New York
st~i.e at midnight.
·
bedroom .''
~ thoughth!or the day: Explorer Jacques Carttersaldondtscoverlngthe .
"When Bruce Springsteen comes
bl~~k shQre bf Canada4s Gulf of St. Lawrena::, "I am rather Inclined to
to our house he sings wbat I want to
llelleve that this Is the land tbat God gave to Cain."
sing.''

'

•

'

"I sat next to Donald Regan at
dinner, and he asked me, as a
woman, lflknewwbatwasgolngon
in Afghanistan. Whenlsaklldld,he
turned to his other dinner partner
and Ignored me for the rest of t!W!
evening."
"George told Prince Charles If he
bumped h!nn once rrore with his
lx&gt;rse, Charles would never he able
to rrount a polo pony again.''
"What surprised me on my first
dive was how enormous the decks
are on the Titanic. You get no sense
of It untll you walk on them
yourself."
"Sidney bad a golden parachute
when he tell RCA - but It didn't

"George Bush Is at hJs best when
he's attacking Ronald Reagan."
"Walter turned down the presidency of Yale because they told him
he would have to live in New
HavEII."
"U you bave to ask what a local
telepoone can costs, you can't

u.
99&lt;
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.. .... ....... .... .... 13
............ .... ... ....16

2 OZ. PORTIONS

Fish &amp; Batter ••••••• 99&lt;
Ll.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

$119
Chuck Roast ••••••••
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
Sl 59
Chuck Roast ••• ~ ••L:·.
·
Ll.

HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED

Sausage ••••••• ~ ••.~·••• $1 99
.,

1~

I~

13 10-51
8 22-61

Cabbage..••....•..~••.. 19 (

• '·

••

Berry's World

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Ohio N(lwsPapt&gt;r Association. Nat tonal
AdvC"r llsinp: RPpr&lt;'Smt alivE&gt;,_Branham
. NPWspaf)f'r 8a l~. 73.1 Ttllrd Avenwe,
·Nrw York\ NM'' York 10017.

•I

POSTMASTER: Send add rf'5s rhan~
to Thl' Da llY !'imtlnl'l, 111 Cotu1 St..
Polft"r~, Otilo 4!1769.

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SINGLE COP\'
PRICE
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Subscribers not de&amp; I rlnR to P&lt;IY t tw-.carrl!'r may rrm11 In advance dlrPCI to
Th(l n allv SPntlnt-1 on a :t, 6or 12 month

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Inland Dall y PrC'ss A!!IQ(' Iatlon and fh £'

On€' Wrf'k ................................ ... $1 .10
On€' Month .... .'.... .... ...... .. ........ .... $4.80
On€' Y€'ar ................. .... ...... .. .... $57.20

••'

OUT

through F'rkt~v. 111 Cour t St. , Po·

mf'l'oy. Ohio. b~· tht' Ohio Vaii£'Y Pub·

Ml"mb€-r: Unllfld Prrs s Jnt&lt;'r natlonal.

'

'')

.,I

''

,,•

09
Cottage Cheesf·.~·· Sl

.:-n•ry aft(' rnoon , Monday

·'

'••
.•

SlkesseD

•

Publl!~ihl'd

•'
•'

BROUGHTON

A Dlvl.ol;l.. .r MDI&amp;ImHta, lac.

li!t hlnFt Comp anyt Mulllmrdla. Inc ..
Polll('rov Ohio 4!17t;9, Ph . 992-'ll Mi. SE-C'On d r l:i~s posl;~~ r paid a t Po n"l{'roy,
Ohio:

'

lbT81LY

The Daily Sen&amp;inel
I USPS 1411-lltl)

•

''

2°/o Milk •••••••••••••• $149
GAL

\

open ,"
"Donald 'lrump has agreed to

butld an addition onto our house."
"Maybe our chtldren won't see
Reagan's Star Wars, and maybe
our chtldren's chUdren won't see
Star Wars, and maybe their
children .won't see Star Wars - but
by God, some~'s children are
going to see II."
"Why don't the TV networks
show more pictures of bappy
animals In South Alrtca and less
shots of unhappy people?"
"Scientists bave just disCovered
that you ~I 96!ewer bubbles In the
New Coke tban you do in the old."
"My wife and I were recently In
Europe. Since the mllar wail so
strong we bought a burtal plot at
Bltburg."
"I'm not say!ngthatl concur with
aU the Navy spying that John and
Arthur Walker did -bat how many
brothers w you know who wtii sttii
give Ill! Cllher a helping hand?"

BROUGHTON

\

•,

"'

Southern travels to Symmes
Friday, then sans down
Wahama on Saturday.

·'
· •·
· \

afford it."
·,
"Does anyone want to contribute
to a fUnd to pay John McEnroe's
tennis fines?"
"Would you folks Hke to see me · •
throw a dwarf?"
•
"Everybody quiet. I'm going to •
"
•
read Playboy in Braille."

.,'

RIBLET

Pay attentionL_____________Ar_tB_uc_h_wa_ld . :
Ills New Year's Eve,and'youare
at a party with nothing but brilliant
people. How do you ~t their
aUention? Just by being very
clever. Carry this In your wallel or
evenlngbagandrefertoltwhenyou
run out of things to say.
"My son plays college football for
free."
"The Soviet defector Yurchenko
was just about to buy our house
before he decided to go back to the
Soviet Union."
"Have you folks ever seen Ronald
and Nancy Reagan give their
hilarious Impersonation or Mikhail
and Ralsa Gorbachev?"
"Everyone In our famtly has
failed the State Department's Ue
detector test."
"I can only stay lor a llttlewhUe. I
have to bum my company's books
before the Pentagon Inspector
General ~Is his bands on them."
"We were walking out of this
steakhouse in New York City when
· these two gunmen pushed us aside
and took out their guns and - ob,
you'll read about It In the newspapers tomorrow."
"Sly Stallone spoke at rurQuaker
meeting til! other night."
"World War m Isn't wbat It's
cracked up to he.''
"The only way my wife wtlllook
at Halley's Comet Is with all her
clothes ofl."
"I read the ftrst draft of David
Stockman's book last night and the
whole thing takes place In the

·

Whole Chicken~L:.... 49
.· c

31·28.

.Faded glory______________k_~_A_n_~_r_w_n_&amp;_J_m~~-h~~~e_ar ·
WASHINGTON- Taped recordIngs of Dr. Josef Mengele merrUy
singing Christmas carols In his
South American extle present a
suWQSedly human side to the Nazi
"Angel of Death," who consigned
hundreds of thousands al Jews to
the gas chambers at Auschwitz.
But transcripts al other Mengele
tapes, obtained by our associate
Lucette Lagnado, give a dl!ferent
impression at the homicidal quacll.
The conversations, recorded In
BrazU in December 100! and
August 1971, reveal Mengete as a
rather tiresome old crank, slut
spouting Nazi racial garbage and
berroantng the wwnfall ct IDtter's
1,&lt;ro-year Retch after only 12 years
of slaughter,
U It weren't for the substance c1
Men~le's pontlflcations, and his

We Reserve The Right To

By Scott Wolle
CHILLICOTHE - When the
bad settled on the annual
tuass "A" boys' basketbeU ·shoot·
between Peebles and Southern
evening at Chltllcothe
the Peebles' Indians
away with a 61-51 come-from~~~~~-vlctory over the local Tor-

ba! l!!.

cr€'du will bP (dvrn carrt{'r each

rtlflnth .
No subScriptions bv maU permlltf'd In
tov.rns whtrl! homi- carrier fJl'rvlef' Is
avallab\('. .

Molt Sobo&lt;rlptl•lde Ohfo

IJ W&lt;'&lt;'ks , .. ............................... $14.!16
2h W('ot'kJ ..... ........ ....... ..... .. .... .. . $29.12
'2 W&lt;'&lt;'ks ..... ..................,... .. ......$68.24
, O!olokle Ohio

CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN

TOTINO

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BANQUET CHICKEN or CHEESE
Sl 99
Paper Towels:::::~•• 79(· Nugge ts ·······~·······
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U..ll I Par Custi!Mr

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Cllllr At PMIII's S..o..,.rllot

OH" btMrtt Sat, I• 4, 191.

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16 oz.

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GOlD MEDAL

FLOUR
s ll.

79&lt;

Umlt I '•• Customer
At PMell's S..,tr ..... tl
Sat., lan. 4, I916

•

.,

'

�11'18

,
December 31

Ohio

·National Ch8mpionship: debate goes on
MIAMI (UP!) - Those strong
enough to endure the Jan. I football
.feast ot five televised bowl games
·Will probably go to bed with visions
·of Index fingers dancing In their
heads anr,l shouts of "We're No. 1"
troubling their sleep.
Before, you the viewer, head Into
.;:.ihis day of national &lt;~gony let's get
one thing straight. It's not your
fault. The major wire services,
United PresS International, and the
Associated Press created these
monsters decades ago.
UP! selects its "Na1lonal Champion" by polling a board of 42
coaches from around the nation.

.

..

•We Reserve The Right To limit Quantities .

'

January 4, t986•U.S.D.A. Food Stamps Accepted
Responsible For Typographical Or Plctoral Errors.

l

KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES

!

I'

•'
'!

614 ) 992 .72·70

..

·· ~

, •Prlctl Effective Tuesday, Deeember 31, 1986 Through Saturday,

l

I
Here is what could happen Jan.l. ranked. No. I, Alabama No. 2 and
The AP polls writers. The two
ACCOUNTING &amp; DATA PIOCESSING .,
services usually agree.
There is one hope for national Southern Cal No. 3.
When they don't you have news- unity: it No. I Penn Stille defeats ·
Alabama defeated Penn State
618 Em MAIN STREET
(
squabble, controversy and the stuff second-ranked Oklahoma In the 14-7 In the Sugar Bowl while USC
POMEROY,
OHIO
45769
of good newspaper sales.
. Orange Bowl, the Nit'tany l.lons beat Michigan 17-10 In . t!r Rose
Faced with the strong possibility would be tj:le lone Division I team to Bowl. The Trojans claimed the UP!
OUR SERVICES INCLUDE
the wires may not agree this ~r. complete the season unbeaten and No. 1 ranking because of a 24-14
-:-Computerized Accounti~g
- Payroll Proct~ulng
you, the fans. have two choices: untied. Unquestionably they would victory over the Crimson Tide In
' -Internal Control
-Federal • State Reports
take the national rankingsseriously maintain their No. I ranking.
.- Tax Planning
Alabama during the season. How-Profit &amp; Lon Staternentl
or don't.
However, the Sooners are 7 1- ever, the Crimson Tide was voted
- Sales Analysis
- Financial Statement•
If you decide not to take them 2-point favorit es to compUcate No. I by AP, causing widespread
- . . . --··
·- . .
seriously then you are ready to matters.
controversy.
THE PROFESSIONAL SERVICE FOR A
enjoy theeomlng storman.dtherels
An Oklahoma victory would open
When an Alabama fan teleSUCCESSFUL BUSINESS
no need to read further. U you do the door to'squabble. Such a victory phoned the l)Pl headquarters In
take them seriously, then you could vault either the Sooners or New York on the day the final
deserve heartburn. But UPI will do No. 4 Miami into the national. title.
were released and was ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~:;
Its best to help you get through.
No. 3 Iowa would have an outside ratings
ln1ilrmEd that Southern Calltornla 1
chance. Some soothsayers have had won the national champion·
even suggested Michigan, cur- ship, he was Incensed.
rently ranked No. 5, could end up
"You dirty no-good Yankee
No. 1. ·
polecat," he screamed Into the
Logically, as the No. 2 team, the phone.
Sooners could lock up the national
In the 1917 season, Alabama also
title with a victory. But Miami suffered the kind of mJsery that
handed them their lone losS this
' , CHICAGO (UP! ) - At an age live 100-yard games, nine, since season, a 27-14 setbilck at Norman, should give h(lpe to Miami.
Alabama was No. 2 heading Into
.when most NFL players have long equaled by the Raiders' Marcus . Okla. And, some members of the
the
postseason then as well. N6. 5
since retired, Walter Payton of the Allen.
UP! Board have already sald the Notre Dame crushed•No. I Texas
Chicago Bears keeps driving
Payton surpassed the 1,® yard J{urrlcanes could get strong 38-10 In the Cotton Bowl and the
We welcome in fA'ir· ·
: forward.
mark for the rilnth time, an NFL conslder&lt;~tion.
Tide
whipped
Ohio
State
35-61n
the
In his 11th NFL season, the record. He also amasSed more than
. the New Year by ·
There is a precedent for the type
·31-year-old Paytonhas played 2,&lt;ro-plus all-purpose yards for the of jump Miami would have to Sugar Bowl. However; Notre
expressing our hopes
hearly three times longer than the . third straight time, another NFL make. In the 1978 season, Penn Dame's Impressive vic tory
launched
It
to
the
top:
average NFL running back. And mark.
State entered the postseason
for joy' and peace to ......... - there were few that excelled Uke
In addition,
he added
to his· carrer
Payton.
marks:
Career
nJshlng
yards, r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;~~;;r~;mm;~~:;:~;;,;;;,;;;;;;,;;;,;~
- : His efforts earned him the UP!
, .NFC Offensive Player of the Year combined yards, 22,153; and 100.
14,800;games,
career73.
rushes, 3,371; career
.,.:.,; 'award
In balloting announced yard
h~ Monday .
Paytog's best game was his
'-. ~ Payton got 34 points while Roger
192-yard effort against Green Bay
Craig of San Francisco received 17; In
which he carried Chicago down
Payton teanunate Jim McMahon the field early 1n the tourth quarter
9 WEll WIIIIEI SESSION
&gt;: 2; and Joe Montana of the 49ers, to p-eserve a tlrn unbeaten record.
18 CLASSES FOR na.oo
·· :Gerald Riggs of Atlanta and Joe Against Tampa Bay In the season
CLASSES START JANUARY I, 1986
; Morris of the New York Giants I opener, he gained 1.20 yards In 17
CARLETON SCHOOL- SYRACU'SE, OH.
~"·each .
carries and caught six passes lor :fl
MON. &amp; WED. 4 :30 TO 6:30 - 1 :30 TIL 7 :30
TUES. &amp; THURS. 6:46 TO 6:46
The perennial all-pro running
FOR REGISTRATION PH. 992-3794
back, who broke numerous NFL · yards.
records while playing for mediocre allYet
the Payton
records,will
all the
be the
horors,
first would
to say
Chicago teams, had another l:P traded In for one thing: A Super
record-breaking season this year Bowl ring.
for the 15-1 Bears.
"There are some people who
AND
•
Payton finished second to Riggs don't believe It, but untU we get to
In the NFC rushing race with 1,551 the Super Bowl and win It, all of the
yards In 3:M carries. But he also records really·don't mean much,"
caught 49 passes - tops on the Payton sald. "That's the thing you
Bears - for 483 yards. The play the game for."
312, Sixth Street
675-1160
combined 2,034 yards were more
Payton Is In his 11th season, but
HOURS :
than one-third 11 the Chicago bas played In play&lt;tf games In &lt;JIIy
Mol" . thru Fr . P 1r
p .m .: Sal. . !:t o .m .· l2 noon
&lt;tknse. and his 11 touchdowns also four seasons. The lack of postwere tops on the club.
season exposure may explain why
,
There was another round Of his achll'vements don't carry the
records, including most consecu- weight they shJuld.
"There's no liner lbotball player
whJ ever played the game, period,"
said Bears' coach Mike Dltka.
.
•~· .
"This season, Walter was again the
heart of this football team. The
things that he did that you didn't
see; the blocking, rumlng the
routes. It's unbeUevablesornetlrnes.
untU you realize, that's Walter."

PH.

·I'Omeroy-MKidleport. Ohio

BIG BEND FOODLAND

NOW AVAILABLE
· HOLIDAY
FRUIT BASKETS

OPtN

9 AM·lO PM
MON.-SAT.
SUNDAY 10 AM-10 PM

•REG. •ADC •ELEC. PERK

~-· ~· ~

Folger's Coffee
'

99

Payton continues
,great pro career

3 LB.

CAN
~INNER

BEll SMOKED
.or TENDERBEST FRESH

HOLLY FARMS GRADE A

Best of
Luck ·

YORK
(UP!)TexasEl
Paso made
a bigger
Impact
on the
UPI Board of Coaches college
ksketball ranldngs this week than
lis move from 19th to 16th might
lhdlcate.
. More notable than the Miners'
rise was their role In bringing about
mighty GEorgetown's plunge from
·~enth to 11th. Last week, UTEP,
9-2 through games of Sunday,
handed Georgetown Its first loss In
10 games this season. The Hoyas'
loss came just when they appeared
to he picking up steam with an
Impressive vktory over DePaul the
previous week.
The first six spots remained
unchanged, as No. 1 North Carolina
collected 31 first-place votes and573
points. The 12-0 Tar Heels routed
Manhattan and Brown by a total 11
136 points last week.
No. 2 Michigan, whjch received
six flrst 'place votes and 525 points,
also moved to 12-0 last week with
VIctories over lllinois-Chlcago and
:, Oevetand State.
·• Duke, No. 3 with a 1~ record,
: J'Quted Appalachian State and
· captured the other two first -place
:,_.ptes and 472 points.
Thirty nine members of the
~2-mernber UPI Coaches Board
participated In the voting, with
pOints awarded on a basis of 15 lor
first place, 14 for second, etc.
No. 4 Kansas won three games to
move to 12-1 and gain 431 points.
Syracuse, 7-0, was Idle, and No. 6
Georgia Tech won twice In ImprovIng to 9·1.
-l: Repiaclng Georgetown at Np. 7,
~1.0 Oklahoma moved up from
ninth following a pair of easy
yictories.
· .st. John's, 12-1 following three
V,)ctories, cllmhed three notches to
llJ;hth place. Louisiana State, 11-0,
¥"as idle last week and dropped a
:spot, but with 228 points was only
-Qne point behind St. John's.
:;, Kentucky, 8-1, completed the top
JO after defeating LoulsvUle In Its
-enly outing of the week.

~
:•
\.

•,

Eastern box

.- F..\'i'I'EH.N IU:I - Ed C'ollln.• . 4·0.M; . l l m Od~rtl,
~~ ~ Cn:-.: li&gt;ochman . 7·0.14:
1'ooc· , 'llupmun . ~~~:!: ,k&gt;fr falcJ¥,·t&gt;tl, ;).Q.g; Rl)'lln
l)ur,.t.:'l-fl. lll: Kl"' narb('r . :\.1-7.: Sltovl'Horr.or,fi.(!..(J:
'j .lllu• Murrin. O·H
Ur~t Nort on, 1~ T&lt;lny
~ l'lldrlx . 1144. TOTAI..S tJ.t.$1:.
"' GIUJDtT (Ill) - Hub Bruwnln", 9-.HI ; St&gt;l'h
'&lt;#,UI Ik.'t'. l).fiU; Un n~ Cllnl', lM·:U: ,Jim NI'W , 0..'-5;
'41111' Harkos..;, 1&lt;14; Dun Harlt"'ill, ~ 1-11 ; Mark
'Mounls, I M : J im IJinAJ'III, ~ KI'Y Abbo!l , I·H .

"·.

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.................w.. SJ.97

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16 OL 2S CY.
STYROFOAM CUPS•••••••• .TJW..... 79.&lt;
1O'l• oz. WIPa&amp;L ·s CHICDIII
GUMBO SOUP•••••••••••••• l.u~.. 99&lt;
101/t oz.
OYSTER STEW.... ~ .......lU&amp; S1.49 '
151/• OI. DEL MIIITE
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SLICED PINEAPPLE ....'.liM\ S1.39
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SUCATASH .................liM\ S1.19
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SAUERKRAUT .............lUA\.... 99&lt;

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WE DO BlAKE SERVICE &amp;
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TACO SHELLS •••••••••••••••••••••••••99c
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LOAF

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MT. DEW, PEPSI FlEE, DIET OR REGULAR

�The

Ankney

LISTED ON .THES_E PAGES ARE GIFTS OFFERED Y 'LOCAL MERCHANTS THAT GO TO THE FIRST
BABY BORN OF MEIGS ,COUNTY PARENTS. . .
OF CHILDREN BORN AFTER MIDNIGHT DEC.
31 , 1985 ARE ASKED 10 SEND THEIR NA.E,~:ADDRESS AND DOCTOR'S REPORT TO THE
.
,
DAILY SENTINEL NOT LATER THAN JANUARJ ·10,'· 1986 AT12:00 NOON.

'

,

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (UPI J
- BowUng Green State University's Howard "Mqe" Ankney wUI ·
fulfill a dream when he walks into
the Doyt L. Percy Stadium as lhe
.Falcons' head football coach.
Anlmey, named Monday as tile
'·..•. new coach of tile 1985 Mid. American Conference champion·
shJp team, said he always \\'anted to
· return to Bowllng Green, where
· Percy, his coach and mentor, led
the Falcons to two MAC
.championships.
"It's !Ike coming back home" he
. said.
The new coach is a 1964 graduate
· of BowUng Green. He was a
quarterback on Perry's 1961-63
teams that posted a three-year
record of 23-5-1 and claimed the two
titles.
"I always dreamed that I mlght
. follow In the!ootstepso!DoytPercy
· and coach at BowUng Green," said
· Ankney. "It'sbeenalongroado!22
years to get here."

A PAIR OF
POLL PARROT
BABY SHOES .

HARTLEY .SHOES
POMEROY, OHIO .

MEIGS
COUNTY'S FIRST
BABY OF '86
WILL RECEIVE ·A
CASE OF

TVC standings
.

TVCALLG~

:rEAM

W L Pts
Meigs ........ ...........9 0 6.l&gt;
~arren Local .. ....... 5 2 468
Alexander .. ... ...... ..5 3 534
Belpre .. .. ...............5 2 &lt;liD
Trimble .... .. .. ...... ..4 4 537

Federai·Hocking.. .. .3 4 435
,VInton Crunty .... ....2 5 424
Wellston ... ..... ... ... ..1 6 4ai
'NelsonvUJe.York .... .l 6 397
Miller ....... ........... .1 6 379
'lVC GAMES ONLY

402
5.1l
435
529
422
454
481
442
495

W L Pts Opp
'Meigs .. .... .... .. .. .....7 o 475 395

'

~

f)

Sl 0 ,GIFT

CERTIFCATE

FROM

WILL GIVE
THE FIRSt
BABY OF 1986

,

FRUTH PHARMACY

1
1
2
3
4
4
5
5

413 483
410 341
473 448
397 m

366 391

364 354
:fi2 405
353 371
Miller ....... .... ... ..... 0 6 lll 417
TOTAJ.II
31 31 31184 38M
RESERVES

TEAM

W L Pts Opp

Meigs ........ ... ........6 1 374 2ll6
Belpre......... ......... .5 1 290 237
Federai-Hocking ... ..4 2 225 217
Warren Loca1 ... ......3 3 ~ ll1
Wellston .... ... .... .....3 · 3 289 260
Miller ...................3 3 267 263
VInton Crunty ....... .2 4 223 292
NelsonvUJe. York .....3 3 270 290
Trimble ........ .. ...... 1 5 239 258
All'xander .... .... ..... 1 6 310 347
TOTAJ.II
31 31 27U 2751
Dec. 28
Meigs Iii Athens 52
M~r !II Berne Union 68 (0'1')

,,,Jts.

Jaa.3Games
Meigs at Wellston
Belpre at Alexander
Nelsonville-York at Federal·
Hocking
VInton Crunty at Miller
Trimble at Warren Local

.

BABY FOOD

POMEROY, OHIOI

MIDDLEPOD, OHIO

'

A CASE OF

•teAuto
,..,_
Complnlll

.•

..
'

· : ·. of 1986

FT
Ass.
CERTIF ATE

·&gt;::

WE WILL HELP THE BABY LOOK

A 3 PIECE
· FEEDER SET

.A S25 Gift
Certificate

For The
1986

A S.lO
SAVINGS ACCOUNT

OUR GIFT

TO THE
FIRST BORN
OF 1986

With. A

TOWARD THE FUTURE WITH A·

CENTRAL TRUST

WE WILL
GIVE .TO
THE FIRST
BABY OF .
THE YEAR

POMEROY

:. ,-w~N :Present The
First: 'Miss" or "Mr."

VAUGHAN'S

CARDINAL

992-6687

·: · •

BABY MILK
~Alii)

J

YOUR
::JCOGER STORE

···t

Sl 0 SAVINGS ~
ACCOUNT

(CHOICE Of

FIRST BORN
OF 1986

First Arrival

'

.

A Gift For The First '86 Baby

••

1l Winning baby must bt IIQnl.t.e 1&amp;; ..~,,~ who are legal residents
of Meigs County.
2l All such babies are eligible.
3) Exact time of birth must be 'lillritioo'll in written stotement by
at1111ding physician.
4) Application must bt filed .in thihffir" by noon, Jan. 10, 1916.
l In case of tie, award will be
at the discretion of the
contest committee.
_61 Prizes must be claimed by 'u"·IJI, 1986.

LUCK!
.,

' 1986

*R

Of

CI.ASSRDADS

POMEROY

FIRST'

LOTS

CUAII II Wlfll

214 EAST MAIN

'

CROW'S F LY
RESTAURANT

FOODLAND

JIOUS( omRaWINC?

In case of loss from fire.
then or other misfortune,
an up-to-date inventory
of your possessions will
help you get your insurance claim settled quickly and to your satisfaction. We furnish our policyholders with a Personal Property Inventory
booklet that provides an
easy, organized . to
record the infnlrm~flnn

WE WILL
GIVE TO
THE 1ST
BABY OF
.THE YEAR

TO THE PA.RENTS
OF .THE FIRST
BABY OF 1986

GERBER
STRAINED

GIVE THE

1----------------1 . ----------------11

PO.IOY I OHIO

CROW'S
FAMILY
RESTAURANT
WILL GIVE A
FREE MEAL

FIRST BABY
GROW BIG
&amp; STRONG
IS A CASE OF

WE WILL

113 COURT ST.

MIDDLEPOU, OHIO

TO HELP 1986's

~------------'---11

POMROY, 0110
992·2054

TEAM

Belpre............... .. ..5
Warren Local ..... ....5
Alexander ........ .. .. .5
Trimble ..... .... .......3
VInton Crunty ... .. .. .2
Federal-Hocking ..... 2
Wellston ...... .... .. .. .. 1
.NelsonvUJe.York .. ... 1

MGM

J

ELBERFELDS

. .

.

CLARK'S J~WELRY

WIL GIVE THE
FIRST BABY
OF 1986

LUV'S DIAPERS

0pp
!'il6

A $15 GIFT
.CERTIFICATE
FARM
CITY,
INC.
614·992-2111
POMEROY

WE AT ELBERFELD$ ·

3 BOXES OF NEWBORN

P PERS
KROGER'S

"YOUI FIIAIKIAL CENtEI"
MIDDUPOIT
Member FDIC

The Heritage
HOUSE OF
SHOES
. In
Middleport

•. · P6MEROY, OH.

For

....•••

Meigs County'S::.
FIRST ...
MR. OR
MISS ft ~ ·
1-.......

'

7

Huskies
defeat
Colorado

OUR GIFT
TO THE
FIRST
OF 1986

WE WILL
GIVE TO
THE 1ST
BABY
OF THE NEW

·chosen
Falcons
·mentor

The Daily

Ohio

•.•Tu&amp;lday, December 31, ~ 985

Tuesday, December 31, 1985

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

For Meigs County's
First Arrival
of 1986
A

ss
GIFT CERTIFICATE
GOOD· FOR BABY
ITEMS IN OUR STORE

ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP!) - The
quarterback option was the ticket
that got Colorado to tile Freedom
BowL But It was Wa•hlngton that
was most effective In using the play
Monday nigh(, and that resulted In
a 20-17 vlctocy lor the Huskies.
Using tile w!l&gt;hbone offense, the
Golden Buffaloes fashioned the
nlnth·hest rushing olfeni;e in the
nation. Quarterback Mark Hatcher
was tile featured offensive per·
former, amassing 539 yards and 10
TI&gt;s on the gr(}Und during the
regular season~ v
But against Washington, the
sophomore had trouble trtggerlng
the wishbone - gaining just 36
yards on 17 carries. Meanwhile,
Chris Chandler, Washington's sophomore signal- caller, ran lor 72
yards and passed for another 141 to
help tile Huskies finish the season
wltll a 7·5 record.
The Buffaloes, in rebounding
from a 1·10 season In 1984, finished
7·5 In 19115. They dld nol go easlly
against Washington.
Trailing 20-10, Colorado tried too ·
trick plays - and the second was
successful- bringing the Buffaloes
within 20-17 with 11:05le!t.
Alter Mike Marquez dropped an
apparent TD pass from spUt end
Loy Alexander on an option play,
Colorado lined up for a 48- yard field
goaL But holder Bar cy Helton - ap
All·Amer!ca punter - stood up,
scrambled near midfield and lofted
a 31- yard TD pass to tight end Jon
Embree.
The Buffaloes then held on
defense and drove down lhe field.
They looked to go ahead wllh five
minutes remaining, but Marquez
was stripped of the ball by Joe Kelly
at the Washington 2 and fellow
Unebacker David Rill recovered.
The Eckel's
Buffaloes33-yard
tied llfield
10.10goal
on
Larcy
wttll 8:41 left In tile third quarter.
However, Washington carne back
with a 53-yam . scoring march,
capped by Tony Covington's 1-yard
burst, to go ahead 17·10.
After three Colorado plays and a
punt, Washington used Jeff Jaeg·
er's second field goal ot the ga me,
from 18 yards away, tomake lt 20-10
on the first play of the final quarter.
Washington scored in lhe first
half on Jaeger's JO.yarder and
David Toy's 3-yard dive. AntiX&gt;ny
Weatherspoon 's 1-yard run gave
Coiorado Its flrst·half points.

Seminoles
derail
Cowboys'

�The Daily Sentin~l

By The Bend
Beat of the bend

,

Keep smiling, despite
the crazy weather
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer

So - we're wrapping up another
year!
I know It's been
hectic and you're
tired. However,

look at the bright
spots .
You
proved yourself
the last of ·~ big
time spenders playing St. Nick for
Chrlstmas. Now, you can look
forward to all of the consequences
- the bllls. that Is - that wiD be
arriving just after we crack open
the new year.
As If that Isn't enough, undoubt·
edly, the weather will probably be
the pits ·- we'll all be lighting the
Ice, thesnowandfrEeztngtemperatures for at )east a good two months.
This not only means high heating
bills, built's so uncomfortable. Well
- this "ain't" Florida, you know.
The annual nu selge hasn't started
yet and by the time the weather
gets better, the Income tax battle
will be facing you.
You think all of that Is negative
and depressing? Heck, I just
scratched the surface. What I'm
saying is thatlt's going to be really a
challenge to keEp smll!ng. However, I KNOW yw can do II.

Ralph H. Sayre Is looking to you
. for Information on the Sayre
FamUy.
· Ralph states thatthe lnfonnatlon
you have must be correct but need
not be complete. So you should not
hesitate to pass on what YCll have
because you don't have every
• detall. Ralph says It helps to know
who someone marrted and the
names of their children and old
obituaries giving family lnforma·
tlon wlll help.
.
You are welcome to send copies
so you can hang on to your
or1glnals. If you do have correct and
complete dates, this, too, will be
hel):IUI.

Pomeroy flnmen having gtven
up their annual New Year's Ball
which was certaln.b' a longtime
tradlfun In the community. The
Ptlmeroy Elemelitary School which
was the last site just proved to be
Inadequate fll:&gt;m the stan~lnt of
space and parking. However, tiremen will do their annual awarding
of )rllel, which was always a part
of the ball, at noon New Year's Day
(II the l.WI'r parking lot.
Meigs Juvenlle Officer Carl
Hysell extends big thanks Ill those
who COIIIJ11luted so generously to
the recent antl-alchoml - drug
abuse t-sblrt slogan contest held In
the high schools of the county.
Without sud! support, the contest
oould have been bnposslble to
conduct, Hysell says, In exiJ"I'SSing
his appreclallon. Bassette Hoose,
A~ns.judged the entrles.

- -

Laurel Clllr's Mrs. Bertha
Parker received word by telephone
from her son, Cedrle Parker, that
her grandson, Eric Parker, who has
been t1 the anned forces tor four
years, has been promoted to
captain.
May '86 be the "best ever" for
you.

guests of Mrs. Davis, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny McDonald,
Mindy, Angle and Danny, Jr.
bc)sted a dinner at their Rutland
home on O!rlstmas Day. Their
guests were Mr. and Mrs. David
Dondding, Athens, Kathy Yarbrough, Shade; Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas T. Simmons and sons,
Thomas and Tyler, Reedsvllle, Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas B. Simmons,
Rutland, and Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Shuster, Pomeroy.

BURLINGHAM - A New Year
watchnlght service wlll be held at
the Burlingham Community
OJurch
beginning
at 7 wlll
p.m.beTues·
day. Harry
Wrlngler
the
speaker and special music wlll be
presented by Saved and the Old
Time Religious Singers.
RtrrLAND - Two special sessions have been set by the Ollve
ToWI)Shlp Board of Trustees. The
nrst will be held at G: 30 p.m. on
Dec. 31 to finish 191fi business. The
second wlll be an organlzatloMl
session at 10 a.m. on Jan. 1. Both
meetings wUI be held at the Rutland
Fire Station.
11IVRSI)AY
ROCK SPRINGS - The Salls·
bury Township Trustees will meet
for their organizational meeting
Thursday evening at 7 p.m. at the
tmmshlp hall at Rock Springs.
FRIDAY
POMEROY - A revival will be
held at the Mt. Olive Community
Church, Friday, saturday and
SUnday at 7::ll each evening.
Herbert Inscoe wUI be the evant!)?·
list, and music wll be provided by
the Pleasant Valley Singers. The
public Is Invited.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Pomona Grange will meet at 8p.m.
Friday at the Rock Springs Grange
Hall. Rock Springs Grange will be

•

. @nation @m~a~y ~
ANOI'HER ENTRY - Fonner GalllpolltaDs
Brock Bordoo, wle Deliprt and 01 Charles are .
supel'\'IIIIIIJ anothereatryln the 'l'ournarnaU of Roles
Pande ill p,......,., The year, IIley are oveneelng
lbe Carnatmn Company's "Barnyard BooKie," all

the host. All members are urged to

attend.
SATURDAY
CENTER - Star
Grange will meet Saturday at 8
p.m. at the Grange hall. All
members are urged to attend.
New Years party

RACINE - A New Year's party
wlll be held Tuesday at the
American Legion HaD In Racine.
There will be round and squar~
dancing from 9 to 11 p.m., music by
the Circle D band. The public 1s

alne lolls ollt.lt 11128 feet ldgh, 181eet wide,
and wiU lake 1,000 man bounlln OOIIIIinlcllon
over :ts,OOO flowers al an approxlmale COlli of SIWI,IOO.

Bordon's parents ale Forreat Mil J(aiCie Bordon of
GaU!poll8.

Smith birth

Star grange has meeting
Ten fruit baskets were dlstrlbuted to the elderly and sick grange
members and friends recently as a
special O!rlstmas program of Star
Grange.
·
Those to which members caroled
and then presented fruit baskets

were Grace Colwell, Carl and Clara
Shenefield, Anna Ogdln, Martha
O!apman, Birdie Jolmston, Buck
and Adria Wilcox, Jolm Nelson,
Anna E. Turner, Binda Diehl, and
Shorty Wright. .
Members who went caroling arid
to present the baskets were Patty
Dyer, Opal Dyer, Maxine Dyer,
Linda Montiomery, Ben RUe,
Becky Rite, and Wald Nicholson.

Haven, W. Va., are announcing the
VIncent
andJeremy
Diane Crlilg
Smith,Smith,
New
birth
of a son,
Oct. 12 at the Holzer Medical
Center. The lnlant weighed flve
pounds, 10 wnces and was 18tncbes
long. Paternal grandparents are
Jack and VIrginia Smith, Hartford,
W.Va. and t~ maternal grandparents are Oscar T. and Madgle
Smith, Pomeroy. .

19;.85~·---:--:---~..---· Pomeroy-

'Organizational
planned
'l1le aJIIlual organizational meet·
ing of the So\llhern Local SChool

District Board of EducatiOn has
been set for Saturday, Jan. 4, at 4

.·

A picture In memory of the late
Reed and Helen Jeffers, long-tbne
active members of the Carpenter
Baptist O!urch, was presented by
their famlly at a recent dedication
service conducted by the Rev.
DoMid Shue.
At the dedication service were
their children, Gene and Martha
Jeffers and Mary Jeffers Jordan,
local; Lee Jetters, Modesto, Calif.,
John and Janet Jeffers Dunham

Nlldd 111111 James Clump

p.m.. at the .high sc;hoo~

Christmas was observed with a
Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Crump,
program
and gift exchange at the
Masm, W. Va., announce.the birth of
recent
meeting
of Columbia
t~ir second child, James Stewart.
Grange
24J5
held
at
the Columbia
James was born Sept. 23, at
Township
firehouse.
Pleasant Valley Hospital. He
Eldon Barrows, master, presided
weighed I pwnda, I ounce and was
at
the meeting attended by 15
21 ~ Inches long.
members
and two juniors. It was
The Crumps also have a daughter,
noted
that
Mr. and Mrs. CUlton
LesUe Nicole (Nikki), 6.
Fraley and Roger, Mr. and Mrs.
Maternal grandparents are Arthur Crabtree, Mr. and Mrs.
Evel)"n Stewart, Mason, and Jack M ·dal J rd
d Mr d Mrs
iSt rt, "Wito W V
en
o an, an
. an
.
andOpa ewa
a n, · a. ' Eldon Barrows attended the O!rlst·
Paternal grandparents are Frank mas tukey
pper 1 Rodn
and Julia Long, Gallipolis, Ohio and Grange In Gal~ Coon; recenUyf'!'J_
the late James A. Crump.
Ellabeth Jordan, women'sacllvi·
Maternal great-grandparents are: ties chairman urged rnembers"to
Frances Stewart, Mason, and Floyd prepare entrt~ for the national
and Addle Cummins, Letart Falls,

·plans meeting

SUN FUN

PENNZOIL
Sp•~l•l

PEPSI

I PACK - 16 OZ.

$181

"OETTIIIO YOU TIIERE SAFELV:'
LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
UGHT TRUCK TIRES
.

Pomeroy Lndge 164, F&amp;AM, will
hold Its monthly rpeetlng at 7:30
p.m. Thursday at \he Pomeroy
Masonic Temple; all Mas~ Ma· .
sons are Invited.

*ALIGNMENTS •FRONT END WOR K
*BAnERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATED: MAIN ST., RUTLAND, OHIO
. OPEN : 8-6 MON. -SAT.; 8-8 FRI.

PH. 742-3088

Mester Card and Visa Welcome

fj~~~~~~~,i
FROZEN

OPEN NEW
YEAR'S DAY

and Richard Jeffers, New Boston,
thetr·grandchlldren and great-

Jeno's
Pizzas. . . ..............

10:00am Til 7:00pm
Re-Open Jan. 2nd. 7:00am
And Resume Normal Hours

ru;

grandchildren, Michael and Dr.
Margie Jeffers Lawson, Michael
and Larme, Racine; Larry and
Ruth Jordan Blrchfteld, D. W. and
Denise, Jane Jordan, Llewellyn,
Jennie and Melissa, Jerrte Jordan
Allman, Robert, Lester and Marco
Jeffer, all local, along with several
other relatiVes and friends In the
community._

sewing contest which will be held at
t~ March meeting of Meigs County
Pomona Grange. The state Grange
legislative conference was announced for Jan. 25 at Friendly
Hllls Grange Camp near Zanes·
vllle. All Interested patrons may
attend.
.
Arthur Crabtree, worthy lee·
tUrer, presented a program using a
O!rlstmas theme. •A decorated
Christmas tree and a gUt exchange
were enjoyed by the members who
were reminded that the state
baking contest wm be held at the
January meetlng. A tudtey supper
preceded the meeting.

.

U:.S. NO. 1

IN OIL OR WATER

ROund White
Potatoes . . . . ~.q;:

Kroger
Tuna .......................

'

10-LB. BAG .. . $1.49-

10-LB. BAG .. . $3.69

.
I,

,_:__:_- -----------------.L...
-;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~;;~;;;;;;~~
....;;;;;;;;;;;;~
f

Pearlie and.Thelma Weave.r, Point
Pleasant
The mother 1s the fonner Usa
Stewart.

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

Dennis Devine,
Columbus, spent several days here
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs . .
Dorsey Jordan, and other rei~liVes.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Chrlst!an,
Catrlna ancl Bret, La Claire, Iowa,
are s~ a holiday vacation
with her relatives. Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Percy ad Troy and Mr. and
Mrs. Granville Lyons.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanley and
Anna, Edison, were recent vlsi!Qrs
of her mother, Freda Smith, with
Anna remaining for a longer vlsH
with her grandmother. Mrs, SIJ!Ith
and Anna then went to EdiSon
~fore O!rlstmas to join tile
Stanleys and Mr. and Mrs. Rel!ce
Prather and Theron !or Chrlstrna.j.
Mrs. Smith returned
home
'
.,
Thursday.
'• .
Roger Fraley, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Cluton Fraley, Jr. unde~
eye surgery In Columbus. He- Is
convalescing satisfactorily at his
home, It Is reported.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Crabtree
and CindY, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Crabtree and Murl Calaway were
O!rlstmas dinner guests at the
home of Beulah Crabtree.

Columbia grange meets

Crwnp birth

i.Oihro~·ipiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifri=======~The~D~a~il~y~~~~=;

Middleport
••

Pomeroy Lodge

Dedication held at church

~w.
Paternal great-grandparents are

SALEM

EAGLE RIDGE - Eagle
Ridge Community O!urch will
hold New Year's Eve watch night
services at 8 p.m. Tuesday.
Special music wUl be presented
by the McDaniel Trlo with Jerry
and Diana Fredrick.

Carpenter
area
notes
Mr. and Mrs.

.......

Lawrenre (Lightning) Boyd has
been moved from the Holzer
Medical Center to the Camden·
Clark Hospital In Parkersburg,
W.Va. He'UbealtheWestV!rglnla
)l)spllal t&gt;r a couple of weeks. By
the way, Lightning really enjoys
getting cards so I know yCll'll be In
touch. The room number Is 517.

CalendarI happening!
'l'UE§DAY
CHESHIRE - Watch service
Tuesday, 7::ll p.m., Silver Run
Baptist O!urch.

Page-S·

All Sayre descendants and
anyooe who knew the Sayre
families, are asked to send lnfonna·
tlon at the earller possible time for
R H. Sayre, Route 1, Box 92,
Buckhannoh, W. Va. :!S:m.
The whole object, of course, Is to
~te the Sayre Family History.

Holiday happenings around area
Mr. and Mrs. John Lehew
entertained with a Christmas Eve
family dinner party at their home
In GaiUpolls. Their guests Included
Mrs. Lehew's mother, Mrs. Akers,
and her brother, Dean Akers,
GaiUpolls, Bill and Margaret Lehew, Billy Lehew, Veda Davis,
Pomeroy, Sadie Timener, Syracuse, O!eryl Lehew, Gallipolis; and
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Lehew, Ian and
Nate, Chillicothe. On Christmas
Day; all but Mrs. Akers, were

Tuesday. December 31, 1986

Tuesday, December 31.

Our Family at the

I

'

•

MEDIUM

LAUNDRY

Yellow
. .
0DIDOS.................

Bold
Detergent .......

lb.

MEDIUM YELLOW ONIONS {25-LB. BAG). · · $3·99

RAWLINGS-COATS-BLOWER
FUNERAL HOME

6.

42-oz.

••

Double manufacturer's
Co·u ons

Wishes ...

"Servire Wilh A Smile~

With $10.

~ln~vi~t;ed;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~loc~a;ttd;gl~n;R~a~cl~ne~,gO~H.~~

400 SHEETS PER ROLL

Charmin
Bath Tissue .

Purchase

This week your manuracturered products "cemt off" coupons ere worth dou~le It ~roger with $10.00 or
more purchase. limited to manuftetured products coupon~ WOith up to and •ncluding 50C Off . Cou~n.•
worth morethon 60¢ oro rodeomod 11 fOCI voluo only. Limk ont OO\JPOf1 for ooch product purch-. Lomrt

4-Roll

one coffee coupon. No beer. wine or ciglllllll COUPQIII wit be double. Not Yltld on~"!""""'· Krovtr
""Coupons or rete~ food store coupona. Thl amount r~nded tw~not exeHd the price of the nm. YfM;i, must
purchue product in eizts ,pocifiod on tho coupOn . Th• oller oppliot only 10 monuf1C1urod producu con11
off""
for ilamo we ClfiV. To IIIUft PfO(Iuctllllllobllltv for el our c,.t.,..,.. only one coupon per
wil be doubled on ony brend 11om during oach llore vloit.

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE, RC-100,
NOW

Diet Rite
! or RC Cola . . .
I
I

Only ...

'I'"~=~
... Months

Plus, 11111111 illltllltlollll $111.96

I~

Bill - lim Blower
Halii &amp; Megan

Bruce Fisher
Rhonda Haddox

. CALL NOW AND SAY-

...CUWBM

"••:J'IiP..f lf1--IW
aatnT.t:.'TtrMt-ltii.U. ....

2-Ltr.

1 12 liMIT 2_2-I.TR. anJ. WJTll tiiM ADDmDNAL PURCHASE !LIMIT ONE COUP ON PER FAM ILY!

,,

All A

SLICED FREE INTO
BONELESS TOP
SIRLOIN STEAKS

HAPPY NEW YEAR!
I,

Lll

COWII -

. . . . . .. -

•. -

••• . , ,. M'ft.uat STAR • lOCAl T.UU

~-----------------------------AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES
KROGER
WITH DEll OEPT.
Springdale
Grade A
Sandy Mac
2% Milk
Large Eggs
Boiled Ham
GaiDA
Peund

Dozen

�Page-l o-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 31, 1985

Jobless rate high in Youngstown

Area deaths
Orville ADen
Orville Allen, 83, OkeechObee,
Fla., a former Meigs County
resident, died Dec. 26 at an
Okeechobee, Fla., rest home.
A retired coal miner, he was born
AprU ll, 1900 in West Vilginla, a son
of the late William and Anna
Russell Allen.
Sllrvivtng are a son, Howard
Allen, New Knoxville. Ohio; two
daughters, Faye Ll'wis, Okeechobee; Ivy Powell, Pomeroy; a
brother, Roy Allen, Toronto, Ohio;
nieces, nephews and a great-great
granddaughter. Sixteen grandc hildren and 12 great·
grandchildren also survive.
ServiCes will be held at 1 p.m.
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home
with Rev. Robert MIUer r:tliclatlng.
Burtal will be in Rock Sprtngs
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m.
Thursday.

Helen M. Shuler

M~igs County happenings...
(:ourt actiol18 r.Jed Pomeroy police chet!k
two traffic accidents

An action for forclosure, one for
divorce. and three for dissolutions
Two mlnor accidents whiCh
have been filed In the Meigs County OCCUrred Sunday were investigated
Common Pleas Court.
by Pomeroy Pollee.
The Diamond savings and Loan
Christina Puntns, Middleport,
Co. has flied a petition seeking a was chargt!d with failure to control
forclosure judgment of $12,564 from after an accident at the Intersection
Richard DeMoss and Esther De- · of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge and
Moss, Pomeroy.
West Main St. Pollee reported thst
Filing for divorce was Iris E. Puntns came off the brldge went
Norrts, Dexter, from Michael across Main St. and hit directional
Eugene Norris, Albany, charging signs. She reportedly lett the scene
gross neglect of duty and extreme to get assistance, and then returned
cruelty.
for an tnvestlgatkm cl the accident.
Actions for dlsrolutlons of their She had a minor nose Injury but no
marriages have been filed by treatment was required , pollee
Sharon S. Darst, Middleport and report.
Lawrence E . Darst, Pomeroy;
At 12:00 p.m. Sunday, Kimberly
Vincent E. Mossman, Pomeroy, Eblin, Pomeroy, making a tum
and Lois M. Mossman, Middleport; from Lynn onto East Main St.
and Edith A. Leach and Harold D. struck a parked vehicle owned by
Leach, both of Pomeroy.
Alfred Wildon, Pomeroy. There
A decree has been flied in the was minor d&amp;m&lt;~ge to both vehicles
court dissolving the marriage of but no chargl!s were fUed due to
Marjorie A. Proffitt and James J . road conditions. It was reported
Profitt and restoring the malden that Eblin slid on the lee as she
name of the petitioner to Marjorte made the tum.
A,. Warner.
· Also filed in the court by the State
No Wednesday paper
ol Ohio, Phyllis J . Wells and Ralph
Benton Wells was an order to the
The Dally Sentinel will not be
Apex Contracting Co. of Paris, Ky.
published
New Year's Day (Wedto withhold child support payments.
nesday)
in
onler thst empJoyees
A second order to withhold child
support payments was Issued to the may observe the holiday. PublicaApex Contracting Co., of Parts, Ky. tion resumes on Thursday.
In the rase of Diana Kay Deeter and
MatTiage license
Ralph Benton Wells.

Dance !let tonight
A New Y ear'k Dance will be held

at the Rutland Civic Center by the
Rutland Lions Club from 9 p.m. to 1
a.m. this evening. Music wUI be
provided by Music Unlimited.
There will be snacks and party
favors. Cost Is $15 a couple or $7.50
for singles.

Weather forecast
J'
Today ...cloudy with a slight
chanCE' of rain. High in the mid~Southwest
winds
to 25 mph
beCOming west
this15
afternoon.
Tonight...clearing. Low 20 to 25.
Northwest
winds
15 mph.
New Year's
Day10...tomostly
suMy.
High near 35.
Extended loreca!lt
Thursday through Saturday
FalrThu~andFrldayexoopt

for a few Ounies north. A chance ol
rain orsnowSalurday.Highaln mid
20s to mid 30s Thu~, wlll'll'llng
to the 30s to lower 40.!1 Friday .. and
to the mid :lis to mid 418 Sallmlay.
Lowsl5 to 25 earb' Thursday and In
the ~ Friday and Saturday.

Ohio lottery winners
CLEVELAND (UP!) _ Mon.
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numix'rs: DaUy Number
572.
Ticket sales totaled $1,179,354,
with a payoff due of SQ12 141.
PICK-I
'
8246.
PICK-I ticket sales totaled
$174.145.50, with a payou due of
$78,527.
PICK-I Sl straight bet pays
$3,384. PICK-4 S1 box bet pays$141.

week &lt;r longer, applied for regular
jobless benefits in Mahonlng and
Trumbull counties.
:
Non-farm w~~ge and salary em·
ployment recorded a net inCl'IBSIJ'of
2,000 jOIJ6 since October l9lll ·-~
Non-manufacturing showm ·6
gain r:t 3,~. blghllghted by grow!h
In retail trade and services.
In manulacturtng, decUnes ln
primary metals, electronic equipment, 110n-electrtc machinery and
fabrk:ated metals overshadowed
In October, ·a weekly averaged an Increase of 1,000 job! In
5,0!16 persons, unemployed one transportatkm equipment.

F'unl!ral services wDI be 10: 00
a.m. ThursdayattheWebbFuneral
Home, 240 Ross Ave., HamDton.
Friends may call at the funeral
from 9:30 a.m. to the time of the
service. Services wD1 also be 2: 00
p.m. Thursday at Memorial Park
Chapel In Wheelersb.l!i.

Helen M. Shuler, 74, 150 N. Third
Ave., Middleport, died saturday
night at the Trident Regional
Hospital In Charlotte, N. C.
)'drs. Shuler was born Feb. 22,
1911 in Middleport, a daughter of
the late WIU!am and Cora Hess. She
was a retired boolt!teeper with the
Shuler Construction Co., and a
retired clerk with the Middleport
Water Department.
Sllrvlvlng are a nephew, Charles
Hess, Lansing, Mich., who was
reared In the Shuler home, and his
Wife, Barbara, and their chlldren,
Charlene and Gregory; two sisters,
Ruth McElroy, Syracuse, and
Harold W. Bennett
WHma Osborne, Pomeroy; a sister·
In-law, Henrietta Shuler, Cheshire,
Harold W. (Dick) Bennett, 59, of and several nieces and nephews.
Fa irfield, and a lormer Gallla
Besides her parents, she was
County resident, died Friday at · preceded In death by a brother,
Mercy Hospital in Fairfield follow- Charles Franklin Hess, and a sister,
ing a long Illness.
Grace Hudson.
He was a retired beef program
Mrs. Shuler was a member cl the
manager for Central Ohio Breeding Middleport First Presbyterian
Association of Columbus.
Church.
Survivors include his wife CatheServices wD1 be held at 1 p.m.
rine; one son, Michael Bennett o! Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Columbus; one step-son, Slaff Sgt. Home with Rev. CarlHlcksotllcfatRalph Thomas ott he U.S. Air Force lng. Burial wU1 be In Riverview
in Germany; one step-d11ughter, Cemetery. Friends may call at tile
Mrs. Schelle Retherford, also o! funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m.
Germany; and one grandchild.
Wednesday.

Michael Ray Elberfeld. 33, Route
1, Racine, and Held! Denise Ewing,
30, Route 3, Pomeroy.

...
,.

We welcome In
the New Year by
expressing our hopes
for joy and peace to ell.

Public Notice

Pulilic Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notlco lo heroby given
thot on Sotunloy, January 4th, 1911, at 10:00
a.m., o public oole wilt bo
held ot 101 Union
.
Avonuo, Pomeroy. Ohio
to - •11' for caoh the fot.

cent• of the creek; thence
lOUth along the center of said
creek, 76 feet; thence il a
northeasiorty direction 324
t&amp;et 10 the center of the road'
leodlng loom Middleport to
Rutland, Ohio; thence mrth·
weotorly along soid road, 76
fMt to the place of beRiming.
Retenoio8 Deed: ilolume
270, Page 223 and Volume
Z79, Paga 559, Meigs Coontv
Deed ROCO«&lt;s.

ROGER MAM'!~Io~!.H SERVICE

Police sharpshooter
kills crazed gunman
NEWPORT, Ky. (UPI) -Pollee
say IIIey "had 110 other choice" but
to shoot a confessed klller and drug
addict who held two teenage
brothers hostage in a gunfirepunctuated demand for $50,Wl and
plane tickets to Europe.
Dennis Lucas, a 20-year-old
ex-(Onvtct who blamed his ''Sick
mind" on drug problems, was killed
Monday by a single shot from a
3IHJ6 rUle fired by an unidentified
state poilce sharpshooter to end the
.»hour siege.
"Due to the fact that the situation
was deteriorating, It became neces-

Special meeting set

Trooper Jim Delwick said officbefore
LucasLucas
was kWed.
ers
believed
was going to kill
Larkin Wardlow even thouj!h It was
more than an hour before his noon
deadline for tile $9&gt;,000 In callll and
three plane tickets - two of them
for the hostages.

GlWPOUS. OIL
446-2691 '

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
HAPPY NEW YEAR

Clyled

Jorthe

ueason
mallie of the

season.IIOeS our
e•presslon of
friendship and

lhanlls for your
•ery special

palronaee.

Top ·of the Stairs
POMROY

..
•

'

HAFIFI'·f'
t-..~E l.a.J

C&amp;D PENNZOIL

~~~~~~·~--~~~~~-~·~~~~~~;;;;~

IT'S

FORMER CLOGGERS
7:00·1:30 .
l.
BEGINNING CLOGGEIS
.1:30-10:00

POMEROY VILLAGE HALL
AUDITORIUM
FOIINFOIMAnON
CALl 992·2622 01 992·6720

'

''

' .•,

.

'·y' E Af;.~ I-

Rd. &amp; Route 7

CLASSES STAIT JAN. 7th

.

,
., '• ...

1986

We extend our
appreciation for
your patronage for
1915 and extend
an invitotion to Itt
•
us serve you an
1916.

l:luuhtd
11! Cour1 Sl., PorM~ow . Ohoo 4~71i9

t1 2) 17, 24. 31 : Jtc

Nyles Relnfeld to continue with the Columbus
Citlzen.Joumal comes as a disappointment toallolus ,
at Scripps Howard," said Lawrence A. Leser,
president and chief executive officer of the
Clnclnnatl·based communications !lrm.
"At tile ttme of our negotiations with the Relnfeld
group, there was no Indication thst their financial
support would not be sustained and we regret that, at
the lith hour, the group's plans havecoliapsed,",said
Leser.
Metro Editor BtU Kessee said be wm stay on fort1Ml
months at Scripps' expense trying to help 75 staffers
locate other jobs.
Ralz said some staffers turned down jobs after ·
Relnfeld gave them false hopes Nov. 15, saying he
would ooy the paper. "Now they're back ID square
he said.
"It's Relnfeld's fault," grumbled reporter T.C.
Brown, who said he w81 "babysit" his children while
looking lor a new Job. "We had all accepted the fact
that we were hlstol)'. He made It worse."
"I don't knowwhatl'll do," said 62-year old Gen~
PJagenz, a syrolcaled religion columnist. "I'd Uke to
stay In the newspaper wslness, but there aren't any
other newspapers In town." He noted the Dispatch
already has a religion editor.
Plagenz has seen the demise cl three other papers
for which be worked- the Boston Record-American,
the IndlanapoUs Times and the Cleveland Press. "I
think this (closing) Is a Utile better," he said. "We got
a little chance toprepare."
As Uleslaffersslppedchampagne, laugjled,chatted
and assembled the final edltkm, a small paper
snowman wearing a "press" hat looked on, holding a
sign - "The End Is Near."

one:·

fee. EPA Is Insisting on a user
charge In order to have a proper
management plan. EPA now has
the petitions from the people. lt wD1
probably be spring before there are
any further developments," Jones
reported.
During 1985, Meigs County saw
the return of a Utter grant - sO!ne
$75,000 and the program Is Just now
getting of! the ground and the
county was approved for a housing
rehabllltatlon program with a
$1i50,000 grant of $:fl5,!XXl a year for
the next two years, Jones pointed
out.
He also reported the hellcopter
pad near Veterans Memortal Hos·
pi tails ready lor use and the road to
11 has been Improved. Jones said
that a hard sudace road wW be
buUt to the pad when weather
penn Its In the sprtng and thst fllnds
are on hand for thst roadway .
Jones spoke of progress being
made at the county dog pound.
"We've come a long way. The
Meigs County Humane Society and
the Board of CommissionerS have
come a long way In correcting the
problems which have existed at the
pound. The dog warden, BW
McKinney, Is a gentleman who
seems to be doing a good job,"
Jones commented.

About the long discussed road to
the Ravenswood bridge, •Jones said
the Ohio Department of Transporlation In Marietta Informed him ·
about a month ~~go that the !lrm
doing the engineering work submit·
ted Its plans which were not
detailed enough. The plans were
relumed to the firm and are being
reworked. Plans are to be returned
to ODOT soon after tile first of the
year and after thst there will be a
public hearing.
Of couiSe, Jones pointed out,
there was never ,anything OUlclal
about actual development of that
road and the funding for lt.
However, one would anticipate If
$tOJ,!XXl IS spent on planning, then
action would be forthcoming, Jobes
remarked.
Hilling again on the economy of
the county, Jones opined that the
economy here Is somewhat llke the
rest of the state. "Not as good :o.s
we'd !Ike to see It," he said.
However, he reported that the
local unemployment rate has again
dkllned although It Is stW too high.
He credited lndustrtes clooe to the
county, tile coal mines and indus·
tries acm;s the Ohio River as
definite benefits for Meigs County
workers.

I

'.

SEARS
.

'

ll
•

T

'"'!rty
'"
cases were processed
Monday in the court of Meigs
Coonty Judge Patrtck O'Brteri.
· Fodettlng bonds on speeding
chfrrges were Ronald Reed, Ironton, $45, and Ruth G. Williams,
Largo, Fla., $50.
lfined on speeding charges were
RlchardWelgen,Sutlon, W. Va.,$25
an4 costs; Tercy Ferrell, Jr.,
Gal!tpolls, $21 and costs; Richard
Habson, Barnesvllle, $25 and costs;
Ml¢hael McDonald, St. Albans. W.
Vat Uland costs; Harold Ramsey,
Wintersville, $22 and costs; Darrell
Sarhs, Parkersbu!i, ~and costs;
Brett Chadwell, Amesville, $25 and
costs; Nancy Mykll, Athens, SZJ
and costs; Rohdonda Hardin, Galllpoltis, $16 and costs; Chester
C~r. Jr. , Letart, W. Va., $22 and
costs; Maurice Delute, Bidwell, $21
and'costs
·.
'
Qther cases Included David
H~er, :omeroy; James Acree,
Poineroy, Darren Cremeans, Rutla6d, llld VIncent Knight, Jr.,
Pomeroy, all charged with crtml·
nal !repassing, restitution and
costs, 00 days in JaU suspended, s!x
months probation and ordered to

perform work at the Pomeroy Gun
.
Club; WUllam Fllz, Beverly, $10
and costs, passing on the right;
Letha CotterW, Pomeroy, tmproper backing, $10 and costs; Jess
Littler, Galloway, transporting or
having a loaded llreann In . a
vehicle, $Ill and costs; Kathleen
Cleland, Pomeroy, stop s!&amp;n violalion, $10andcostll; JosephMurpl\}',
LangsvWe, failure to display valid
liCense plates, $10 and costs; Gary
Gilmore. Rutland, drlvlilg while
Intoxicated, ~ and costs, 10 days
in ]aU and Ohio llcenJes !llspended
~days ; Iert of center, costs only;
Jphn F. Aelker, Pomeroy, drtvlng
while intoxl cated, ~andoosts, 10
dfays in JaU and Ohio llcer!!e
suspendedformdaya; Dale Rittle,
Pomeroy,, driving while lntoxl·
cated, UX1 and costs, 00 ,llays in Jan,
Ohio license suspended for one
year; nooperator'sllcer!!e,IS!and
costs anc110 tays In jaU; improper
regtstratloa, lllllll lilly; Johnlly
Gantaer, Plllllt l'leallnt, PB••na
bad checks, $21 and oos~S, restltutton; KennethHenry,MurraysvUJe, .
w. Va., driving while IntoXicated,
$250 and oostsa three ~ays In JaU,
'

license suspended 60 days, attend
drtvlng school, JaU .sentence and
$150 of fine suspended; saUy
Chapman, Middleport, disorderly
conduct, $~and costs.

Emergency squads
answer seven calls

sEven calls were answered by
local units Monday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Sel'lli·
ces reports.
Rutland at 9:22a.m. took Melissa
German from Depot St. to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
1:29 p.m. took Brandy Roush from
247 Mulbercy Ave., to O'Bleness
Hsopltal in Athena; Middleport at
2:32 p.m. took John flunnell from
Spring Ave., to Veterans Memor·
lal; Racine at 5:32 p.m. went to
County Road 28 for Delmar Grady
who was treated lJJt not transported; Middleport at 6:44 p.m.
took Lois Hubbard from S. Third
Ave., to Veterans Memorial; Ru·
tJand at 7:51p.m. took Mary RJap
fromRoute124toVeteransMemor·
lalandat8:32p.m.,Mlddleporttook
Alva Newell from Pearl St., to
Veterans M
rial
emo ·

PH. 992-2156

Business Services

Company retetves the
right to reliCt ony or olt
bldo oubmlt1od.

WH0~0-0-0

condition thty oroln with
no expreiMCI or implied
werr1ndea given ,
1121 31: 111 2. 3. 3tc
1811-1180

can help
you?
CLASSIFIED ADS

Public Notice
SHERifF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
The State of Ohio
Molgo Coun!Y
Bonk One, Ailiona, NA
Plointlff
\11.

~

GET SOME BREAD
:WITH AWANT AD

Further, the automoblleo will bo oold in the

Judge O'Brien processes 30 cases

BILL.AND JENELLE HAPTONSTALL
MIDDLEPORT

' (Continued ll:Om page 1)
• Spe..klng of accompUshments,
Jones commented that he feels the
major accomplishment In these
tines Is managing to stay In tile
~ack financially, and stUI maintain
services already being provided.
Jones also hit upon tile revenue
!!)larlng program. It has been
reduced about;!() percent and wUI
~completely phased out at the end
19116, altoough that Is not official
at this time, Jones pointed out.
Mandates from the state leglsUa:.
l\lre have hurt tbe county governdlent, Jones said, because the
qountles cannot always finance
t11ose mandates. Another real
pJUblem facing county government, he pointed out, Is liability
insurance.
"It's getting to the point where
about 25 percent of the budget If you
wish to do so could be spent for
llablllty insurance," he stated.
About the j:lendlng Tuppers
Plains sewage disposal system,
Jones said the project Is currently
· being held up In the office of the
Ohio EPA waiting for the approval
of :plans and a determination on
wliether there wUI be a serviCe fee.
:•we were presented a petition
trqm the folks in the Tuppers Plains
area obJecting to the proposed user

or

Trudy Marshall, Mary Pewtlr lawle ltttlr Ua LIICn
(Sheila Powti·T-illtl

.,

UPI.

i\feigs has stable financial condition

Alone wlfh the ·

gg ¢

TIME

teary-eyed hugs and the popping of
c;hampagne corks Monday afternoon, staffers put the
!lnlshlng touches to a 26- page edition featurtng a six·
page supplement on the C·J's history.
·
~ "It looks almost like a Mardi Gras," obServed
Jt!anaglng editor Seymour Ralz as he surveyed the
~ty room Illuminated by television lights and
_ j8.!Jlllled with outside reporters Interviewing his staff.
r The C!tlzen·Journal, a combination cl the old
Columbus Citizen and Ohio State Journal, both of
1fhich date hack to the tum of the century, was
~owed lo fold by Scripps Howard when the Dispatch
th-tntlng Co. announced earlier this year It would 1101
ti!new a joint operating agreement underwhichltsold
t9Jvertlslng for, prtnted and dlstrtbuted the C.J.
- The demise of the C.J leaves Columbus, a
metropolitan area exceeding 1 million people, with
OOJy one hometown dally newspaper.
~ The Columbus Dispatch, heretofore an evening
~per, wUl llegln publishing In ~ morning
Wednesday.
: The C.J's fate was sealed when Akron-area
!3Jstnessman Nyles V. Relnfeld annourx:edSUndayhe
came up$100,000 short of the estimated $1.5mUllon be
lieded to keep the newspaper in ooslness.
• Reinfekl had announced on Nov .15 that he planned
tO buy the morning newspaper.
• Scripps Howard expressed "disappointment"
1\londay at the tum ol events.
: "The news of the Inability of the group headed by

342 21141 AYE.

113 COURT

g,,,,,

CL0881N'

~tal.

We Wish You All ihe Best
In' 1986

MANY PREMIUM BEERS ON SALE
CHIPS ON SALE
2 LITER COKE &amp; 7-UP .......................
OI'EN I1U II ... YUI'5 M t11111 All Dl YNEW YUI'S
FlY' e p...u.h

.

•,

"We felt hlsll*'was In Immediate
A special meeting of the Orangp danger," Delwick said cl the
16-year-old.
Township Trustees wUI be held at 6
Earlier, the Lucas had threap.m. Friday at the horne of Clerk
tened to tie bolh boys to a bed, pour
Nina Robinson. The annual organi·
gasoline over tllem and ''oom them
zatlonal session wW be held.
up."
. In calls to a Cincinnati radio
Veterans Memorial
station, Lucas claimed to have
killed t1Ml boys, and autrorttles
Saturday Admissions--Grover later found the body of James Cain,
Oliver, Rutland; Mary Furbee, 15, In the Ucking River nmr where
Racine; GarUI Smith, Reedsville; Lucas saki he dumped lt.
Fred Shain, Racine; Robert Campbell: Racine.
Officers have expanded the
Saturday Dlscharges.. None.
search for Lucas' second alleged
Sunday Admissions--Beulah victim, Eddie Pence, 14, of New·
Maxey, Tuppers Plains; Anna port, missing since Dec. 13.
Turner, Rutland.
Lucas was shot through a window
Sunday Discharge--George
of
the aging brick apartment
Genhelmer.
Admllted-·WIIma Anderson, Ra· buDding In suburban Cincinnati
cine; Wiley Ours, Racine; Melissa from a distance estimated at 50
German, Middleport; John Hun- feet.
The gunman, who was released
nell, Pomeroy; Lois Hubbard,
from
the Indiana State Pi'L'Ion in
Middleport; Alva Newell, Middle·
November after serving 18 months
port; Mary Riggs, Langsville.
for
theft, had said he would rather
Discharged.. Belva Nelson, Betty
dle
than return to JaU.
Collins, Robert CampbelL

N• ,,,., E, ,,,

; COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -The Citizen-Journal, a
!ll).year old Scripps
. Howard newspaper serving
tl.O,!XXl readers, said "Goodbye ColumbUs" Tuesday
womlng with Its final edition, a New Year's Eve

WE WILL BE CLOSED
WED., JAN 1st &amp; THURS., JAN 2ncl

.POMEROY, 011.
992·2054

a joint operallac apeemeat with .the Colwnbus
llllpatcla I'Pbl!oblnc CAIIIIP81Q' wiHh explrell ilday.

;CJ says .goodbye to readers
:~ 'Amid

sary to take the life of Dennis
Lucas," saldstatepolloeCapt.A.D.
Fortner. "We had IIOothercbolce."
Fortner said it was feared Lucas
would shoot hos• Larkin Ward·
low, 16, who was handcu11'ed to a
bed and had his Jlfe repeatedly
threatened. Wardlow's brother,
Robert, 14, was released shortly

1971 CHEVY MollbtJ
1W27M8KII1737
1978 DODGE - Setlot
No.XP22KIA127997
1878 MERCURY - 2
Dr. HT. Mfr'o -Ill no.
9H8311820478 Cougar
The Formoro Bonk ond
Sevinga Comp1ny, Pom·
oroy. Ohio, lft81VII tht
right to bid ot thio oalo,
and to
withdraw tho
above collotarol prior to
ule. Further, tho Farm·

era lank and S•vlngs

• GOODBYE COIAJMBUS- Prmter llob Swanzm
; likes up the Dnal front page of the Columbus
: Clllzen.Joumal, lhe 117,810 clrwlalloa Scrp
!Howard newspaper bas been printed since 1911111der

.Thanks for the Chrisimas Gifts!

SWAT 'IEAM BEADY - A SWAT team member lliBDdl pllll'll
ouGIIIIe a IBIIIi! Meaday mNewpon, Ky., wbere 111 ex-eoll\'lct boJdla&amp;
two teeucen 1IDUce - ldlled by • pollee ~· The
leeaapn -...-. Polce lellftd lorlbe life ollhe alder brother 111 IIIey
loolllhe drMtlc actloll. UPL

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wnh Da1llr Sentinel
DtJI

'

:-

COLD BEll, GAS and GIOCEIIES

lnte-'"'ti'on of

The Daily Sentinel

.lassified Ad8

••

.C&amp;D PENNZOIL
fHI

.

to-g cotlotorot:

IW ,,, g,,~1•1 Af

g,, ,, F,

The Daily Sentinei- Page-'-11

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI) The Youngstown-Warren area had
a higher unemployment level in
October than In September.
Figures from the Qhlo Bureau ol
Employment ::Jervtces show the
clvWan unemployment levelat 11.6
percent in October, up from the 11.2
percent the month before.
The OBES estimated unemploy.
ment at 25,000 In October, up from
24,000 in September.

'

Ridlard E. Rolhbum,et II.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410

o.t..dont
No. 815-CV-237
In P'"*'"""" olen Order of
Sole In .... ......... ..titled
octlon. t wilt after fD1 II
public .,ction, ot tht cbor of
.... Courlhou• In PomMOy.
Ohio, In ............. County, on Frtdoy, tho 17th
cloy of Jonuory, 1981. 11 ' '-----~~
10:00 o'clock A.M .. the fDI·

WE

INSIDE YARD SALE

JOH C. EBLIN
GARBAGE SERVICE
Rt. I, Coolville
985-4189
HAUL ~ BIG

OR SMAll
PICK UP WEEKLY

Reuo nable Rates- Reliable
11 ·22·1 mo.

t

PHONE 992~7075

a

~

f

New Year!
11·29·85 I mo. pd

~

ELUM
REST HOME

IPrnlou1ly lutiDIId IMI Hom•)

674 Plum St.
Middleport
•Tender Loving Care
•Senior Citizens

24 _. 30. lloundod and
followo:-

•Disabled

Boglnn:lnv 11 tho ooulhtltt

•24 Hour Care

Hyootl'o lot

CAll JOE LOWlAND

- . . In • - o r l y

dhee*""'· 280 t.t to the

2

'

We Wl1h All Our
Cultomer• AMerr"
Chrlltmu and AHa~~V ,.

lowing
realof-Moigo·
ftloto Indaoattbod
the County
and • - of Ohio, ond In tho
T-Ip ol s-.ry to-wit:
Sltuow In Sollobury Town·
lhip, Moigo C...nty. Ohio.
·Situ-In Town 1, Ranfll 13,
Dhlo ~ony'o Purd&gt;-.
~ • port of tho -otfy
ond of lot No. 301,in Sectlono

- ·of-

IH·I5 I mo.

fii.U£
STREAK CAB CO:-f
107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.
a

LIMESTONE
'
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

doocrlbtd u

Down from Rutland Post
Oft ice, will be running until
after Christmas. New &amp;
used toys, somethin1 for
the whole family, dolls.
tools, novelties, etc.

992·3595

12130/ 1 mo.

In Memorilm

A lllillioo tiiMI WI needed
1011
A million times we have
critd,
If Iovt could han savtd
you
You never •u ld hlvt
ditd.
In life "loved you durly
In dttlh we love you still
In our' hearts you hold a

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

AUTOMAnC
TRANSMISSION
OVERHAUL

FOR ALL YOUR
Risidential &amp; Commercial

•TRANSFER CI&lt;SES•
•TORQUE CONVERTOR&amp;•
•USED - REBUILT
TRI&lt;NSMtaSION&amp;•

Call:

"'' 0111111
Automatic

ALl AMEIKAN MADE
CARS &amp; TRUCKS

WIRING NEEDS

992-5875 Or

TraMMk ian Overhaul
II. I, Palrlol, Oh.

742-3195

61,·379·

8·8-tlc

0
I

pi act

No one un ever fi II.
It broke our htlrt to lose
you
But you didn't 10 alone
For part of us went with
you
The d1y God called you

homa.

•

Very stdly missed
Pmnts,
Dorts tnd Mildred Arnold
Wile, ann •d Cliild1111
Brothers and Sisters

HUDNALL

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

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

3 t7 North St&lt;ond
Middloporl, Ohio 457 60

SALES

&amp; SERVICE
We Also Carry

II

115 I liCK ST,

POMEROY
CROCHETED
HATS

1'6141 992·6550

RESIDIN&lt;E PHONE
t614) 991-77!4

992-5738

IUSINESS PHONE

PH. 992-7201

OPEN THURSDAY
THRU SUNDAY

IN YOUR COLORS
Many Other Crafts
Available

Fishing Supplies.

JIM CLIFFORD

THE HAT RACK

11?2/llt

t1·5· t mo.

RMI Eltata General

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
SPUT LEVEL HOUSE willl 3
bedroo!M, 2. . . bllhs.
8inlnc room, !illite room1nd
, lql IKIUtioo room. lD~ on lw•. LM11 fn
pond. Racint ....

. 3 IEDIOOIIIIOBILE HOllE
on 3 lots in Sy11cuse.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

CIRCLE
CONTRACTING

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

....
Contracting Service
Complete Building
(Free Estimates)

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.

PAT HILL FORD

Long Bottom, Ohio

992·2196
Middleport, Ohio

PH. 949-2649

1- 13-tfc

11-12· 1 mo.

OLDER HOUSE with 3 btd·

B&amp;D Mobile Home
Repair Service
SHADE , OHIO
Anything that has to
do with a mobile
home. No lob too small
or too 'ig. We do
Setups and
Underpinning.
"Special lalu for
Senior Clthons"
PHONE 16141 992 -6100
t1·10·111 mo.

rooms on corner lot in Syr.'
cu•.

HOME NATIONAL
BANK
949-2210
64 M!IC. Merchandise

Battery Sale
COMPLETE Ll NEOF
FARM AND AUTO

BATTERIES
AGRI BOSS

12 VOLf..6 VOLT

3 YEAR WARRANTY
ONLY

$39 95

AU SIZES Ill STOCK
MGM Farm City

Service Station
OPEII 7 DAYS AWEEK
I A.M. TO 11 P.M.
PHOIIE 614·H2·9932

ICUT

GUN SHOOT

our FOR FUTURE USII

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

lashan Building

SERVICE
985-3561

6:30 P.M.

•Washers •Dishwashers

Factory Choke
12 Gauce Shotcuns Only
9-30·11

•Refrigerators

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addons •nd remodeling

- ROoting end guner work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing end etectrtcN
WOfk

(Freo EttimoteJI

V. C. YOUNG Ill

All M•ht
•Ranges

•Dryers •Freezers

' PARTS

and

SERVICE
4·5·tfc

•Complete Remodeling
*Room Additions
•Roofing
•Siding
•Gara,es &amp; Pole
Buildmgs

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
long Bottom , Ohio

992·6215 or 992 ·7314

Ph. 985-4141

Pomeroy, Ohio

Free Estimates

12·8-tlc

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
1

Roger Hysell
Garage

10·17 "'

Also Transmission

PH. 992-5682
or 992 -7121
3-14-tfc

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO
Autholized John Owe.
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipmen!
Oealer

Farm Eqal~ment
Partt &amp;Service
1·3·tfc

�.

. ..
Sentinel

Ohio

Business
Services

41

LAFF·A·DAY

for Rent

Hou-

4roomol~.

noWiyrot_.t. ,,.,.,. •I 118 '-cl

4wo.. Clollr&gt;ollo.

-------~...,·-·

·,

......... far-·

~
2 bdr., 2mll•
fn&gt;m · Koto... I yr. old, Col
114·441-1810 Of 114·1712241.

W'l'leM

MtM~ . -.w

Srt.tb "I WOII'T'

"*"

BE'
'llU.
Nm Vf~lt"?

2lOCAftONS
New limo Rd.
I 01 Vine St.
Rutlo..t
Gallipolis
742·2225 or 742-2778
446-9244

42

Monday-Saturday

Hawt Your lrophy Mounted ly A
Nt~t P1le~

QnOtg,

LISA M. KOCH, M.S. ,

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

X

z-

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213 ·
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
·

THE

Have Your W....int.
Amiv1r10ry or Sp•ltl
Ckmioro ., Vioi•.-Wt
Topt My Spocltl O&lt;eesion.

IIOUNTRY
KLUI
Golf

CHAlliS lAilEY

Equipment

.............,I d $1.50&amp;
Onoop Gel . ....

PH. 14J·JO:IO

suo Dao.

•New 6 Prior Owntd Clubl
•CullOm Clubs

A1111111111 r. eIill' 11 t s

Youth C~bl
•Sho• •Trophin
•Repair

JOHN TEAFORD

Announcement~

3

12-11-l mo.

RENT A'CAR
CALL
446-4522

"We Rut F11 Un"

U-SA~E

·AUTO St.RENTtL
Rt. 160 ert~
~It

Oelllpellt,

SWEEPER and atwlng machint

....,..,, J*tl. and tupplltl . Pitt
up and dlltv..-y, Davia Vtcuum
Clqnar, on' half mila up
Goorv• C,.... Ret con &amp;1 4·
441-0284.
Racine Gun Shoot apot~IOred by
Racine Gun Club. Evwy Sunday,
Mginnlng et 1 :00 p.m. FKtvry
Choke 12 IJUIIII thotguna.

N.w Year 1881 Pttm Specill.
Jan. 2nd 10 11ttl. •1.00 off aH
Parrna, 121 and up. Batty'•
8NU1y loutklua, 7 2nd Str..t,
M_.,, 304-173-6272 .

4

Giveaway

,., All YHf ,,.,., NHII
PlUS: Office Suppli• &amp;
Furnituro, WHolng
.INIIIGroduotion
Stotion•y, llognllk
Signs, lublotr SloMpi,
........ f .......

Copy S.nim, Etc.
255 Mill St., Midf ~~ t
I 04 .......ry Av., Pom•oy

992:3345

3/2/Un

EUGIIIE LOIIG

SUPERIOR
\ SIDING CO.

VIIYL I A...INUM

Complete Gutter Worll
Complete Remodeling
Rooting of oil Typu
Worllod In homo or•
20yooro
"F- Eati1111too"

CAll COilUT: .

Ph. I6141143-S42S

11·12·2 mo.

•VINYL SIDING
• AlUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN.
INSULAnON

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

New Nemes Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949·2101
or 949-2160
No Sunday Calls

!111/tlo

Pupplef to tNIIWiy . Approx . 7
w•kl otd. Doberman • Pit lull.

114-742-2204.

30 chicken• end 1 turttYto give
_.,_ &amp;14·892·83110 .
.

""*

2 pupp'-1o gfytiWIY, Aultrlllon • .,.
.,d 1. &amp;14-892·
72&amp;3.

6

Lolt and Found

Fomolo Boogie lol1 wlcinlty of
24111 l Joflonon l Joricllo Rd.
N""o l.ody. Wlllring lllvwn
colllr, no gga, If liM or found
col Cho~• ,.., 304-&amp;7&amp;2187 or Ruo1y 810175-2289.

8

, Public
•

Sale
Auction

RICK PEARSON.AUCTIONEER
SERVICE . Ett111. ferm, tntlque,
nquldation ...... Uc.Md Ohio
and W•t VlrvW,~. 30•·773IJ78!S

9

Of

304-773·M30.

Wanted To Buy

We ply cuh for late model c:letn
Ulld c.lrt.

Jim Mink C.....,.-Oids Inc.
BIM Gene John.on
814-448·3872
WANTED TO IUY uHd wood.
cool hoi-. SWAIN'S FURNI·
lURE. 3rd. • Olive St. Gallipo111. Ctl/&amp;14-448-3169 .

.,id

TOP CASH
ior '83 model
and newer uted clrs. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 E11ttm
Ave., Gelllpolis. Call 114·4412282.
Buying d1lly gokl. tUYtr COins.
rlnga. Jtwtlrv. sttf'llng w•re. old
cotna.
cumncy. TDp pri·
c•. Ed. urtc.tt llrb« Shop,
2nd. Awe. Mlcklltport. Oh. 114·
992·3471.

luyfng Rew Fur. htf '"d DNr

hkt... Sllllng·trapping IUI)plill.
Wh-..t tnd nih het. Oeorot

Buck loy, 114· 114 · 47&amp;1 ,
Houro:U -9 p.m.

350 engine for 71 Chevy pidl:up

truck . l&lt;M-178-219&amp; afttr I
p.m.

ALL STEEL &amp;

.POLE BUILDINGS
tiz1s Start From

f lllllillVilli'!ll

12'xl6'

) PI V I !'"

:UTILITY BUILDINGS
6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Doc Houses

• Sizes from

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Oh.

614-843-5191
10-6-tfc

TOWN &amp; COUNIIY

VETUINAIIAN
CUNIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PLEASANT OFFKE
305 Jack10n An.
SIUI1 ANIIIAL HOUIS
....WIMI.·Thun. J.S pN
Tuos. ••30-1; fri. 1· 2 pm
lotlr4oy 10· 11:30 am
IAIGI ANIMAL &amp;
SIIIGIIY IY~PPl.

PH. 304-675,2441
liND AIIEA CALL
llplty OHice
For Hours .
304:372.5709

I0-14-tlc

I

t 11

H 1 W
d
e p
ante

Rtpl

NHdld.

For

bu1in••

ICCOlints. Full·tlmt UO,OO() to
180,000. Pert-time t12,000 to
111.0()0. No Hlling. Roput
buP,•• · Sit your own hours.

Training provklld. 1·112-931·

8870. Mon,·Frl. lAM to 5PM
CST.
'
teMp thoM New Ve1ra Reeolu·

tiona. LoN weight, fNI grMt,
..m ektra dol ...... 10AM·IPM,
&amp;14·441·04&amp; .

4VON SoH 4""' OtY Chri11mo1
bills, li:mhld time 111n up fee.
FREE . Coli 114-441·3368.

Eo., - l y Wart/ 1800.00
P• 100.Guuent41ied P1yment.
No ElrP•ienc:.No Sal11. Detailt
Hnd HH·IIdd,...Hd ltamped

fntorprito Rd. Ft. Pl•ct. FL
33412.
E... A'"'"bly Wart! 1&amp;00.00
per 100. GUirantHd payment.
No EXPIMienCI-No hi•. O.tli11
lind Hff· lddNIMCI •mped
MVIIapt: El• Vita1·5847 3418

Enterprise Rd, Ft. Pl«t:a, FL
33412.

12

Situetions
Wanted

YtH*I:cy for the .w.riy In ovr
honw. T,.td .nd fifleen ye1r1

IKparlanca . Ctll 114 -8127314.

V~CW~cy
WOmM

ror Mletiy man or
In my homt. Eq~•
rt.nc.d ctre, rwtOnlblt FltH.

Co11814-117-Q29.

,_,... hcurity Uf1 hM In

"""DY
op.,ing in tho Pt.
Pf.aun1-Gtllipollt A..... Unlm-:

11

Help Wanted

One certifted M.ticel TIChnologiat, wllkdeyt. Sand I'IIUft'W or
opply 10 Medll:ol l'ta11. 203
Jacklon Pltle. Oalllpollt, Oh
46&amp;31 .

Govemmtnt Job1 tti,0-40119,230 yr. Now hiring. Coli
801·187· 8000 El1. R-4612 for
current flderallia.
WANTED:ExptritnCid Pmduce
m~nagw. No leu thM 3 VI"'
tJiparltnee. Good pey • benef·
Ita. Bend ruume to The Dally
Sen tint!, 811.72'9 C.

Govtrnmtnt )Obi t11,040·
U9.~30. N- hiring. CIII80&amp;117-IIOOQ, oat. R-9801 lor
curr111t fld.,1i lilt.
ASK THE ARMY NATIONAL

GUARD RECRUITER ABOUT
VACANCIES FOA QUALIFIED
PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE IN·
DIVIDUALI. Part·tlnw iob1 with
fuH·timt benefits:. C•ll 104·1715·
39110 .. 1·800·1142·3819.

BE A PART OF THE NEIGH ·
BOAS HELPING NEIGHBORS
TUMI Join thl Army Nttionll
Ouard lftd you have 1 fOOd
1*1-ti~ ClrHr--good blneftt•
· monthly plychtok .. NO
LAYOFFS . Coli 304·17&amp;·3810
or 1·100-142-3118.

32 M bll H
0

()

•

II I II·

1812 14a70 with 22 It, oa·
poneto.
2 bdr. co~ 814-241-

18
IIRIW

1834

-2 bdr·.. on

R1. 7 • ._,.....

luntlllhed. wetor po/d. IZIKI
dot&gt;
!rod eo~
roqu
'

I Ill IilLI ,II

14x70,3bdr,. lnCenten.-y. C.II
114-441·4292.

e
0~11
for Sele

2 bdr .. I or 2 tduHo. no -

dotl. • nrr. Co/1114·317·7743.
1882 Cloy10n. 14XII. fully
fum .. walhtr. dryer. Aef, undll'·
pinning &amp; porch. EICC. cond.,
"""" on em.. Coli &amp;14·211·
1&amp;21 or 814·21&amp;·131&amp;.

198214J&lt;70 wlth22 ft. Olq)OndO
on r.-ted lot. 2 bdr, AC,
undtrplnnlng, lorch. mt111
building. Cllll1 -241·1134.
1910 Ubo"' 14afl4. 2 btcfroom. unfurnlshid, vinyf
pinning included. Must 1111. C.U
304·773·1173.

unci•·

1918 Schultz IOa&amp;O. I btcffully carpttld ·• rtmodMid. t3200. EC. 114·14121&amp;6 onv11mo.

Bu1ineu
Opportunity

!NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. NCOmmtndl that you
do bulln•• wtth people you
Mow. lnd NOT to und mon.,.
1hrough the mil until you heve
inv..tiglted'the off.ring.

22

Money to Loan

23

Profeuional
Services

Pitno tuning tnd rtPiir. tuna up
for the holldtys. tpec:lel dis·
count. Werd 's Keyboerd, 304 ·
875· 5600 or 875·3824.

1810 Uberty 14a&amp;4, 2 br
unfumlthld, vlnyf und-lrptnfting
lncludod. Mu11 loll. 304-773&amp;173.

36

Lots •

Acreege

Farm for 1111: no houll', 2 b.ma.
county water l •ptlc tlntc. Cal
114·3,.·2281.
Why poy double pricol Wo lluMd

big 4 bcfr. El/llv AmlriCIO HOIMI
tfl.tfl&amp;. Nowmodolopon. can
114-US-7311.
JUII 2'1! mil• off At. 38 In
Muon County. be. hunting a
priwocy on thlo 133 ·

Adjoining Corn ltolk lt11o P.,-.
oHing U7,000. Muot loll. CIA
114·441·0201 1:30PM.
100

acr•

:m.~i~

o• welt on

..... ,...

wfth 2

Co~

44

Apertment
, for Rent

41

Houan for Rant

Plko, Oollpollo. •zoo wotot
pold, Z bcfr. Ctii441-441S7PM.
3 bdr.• llrgo kHchon, nl.. utlllty
room, 1 cer g•ege. U8&amp; mo.
Rof. • dop required . Coli 114·
441·13&amp;1.
.

Nice 3 bedroom UIO 1 month.
314 3rd. lt., KIRIUgl, Cltl
114·441·7473.
I roome • bl1h, newly dteorltld. Inquire 11 118 Second
Avo.. OoH/t&gt;OIII.
clottt:. Kytlf Crlllk adtoo4 dlt·
trict. Coll&amp;14·448-0&amp;41.

Nloo 3 bdr. ltomo 111 ltltc:hon
appl .. nott, locttld Sanden
Drive. Oallpol... 1300 '*mo .•
He. dtp.
ref. requifadl. Call
&amp;14·448·02114.

3 bdr, Blh mil• Pill Holnr on
Rt.1SO. UOO mo., 11&amp;0 dop ..
no poto. CoM 114·311·17t3.
Two btrdroom unfumllltllll wh:h
btsement. In HlndlfaOn, no
p11s. t185 moftth, $100.00
depotit. Caii304-17S-1118.

A-

JACKSON EITATU APARTMENTS !Equol Houolng O-tunl1y) monlhlv rent ltlrta It
t111 lor 1 llodroom tnd 1204
fat 2 bod room, . dopooit 1200.
lpritlg Vllloy Ptou
ond F-tnd. poolontiC-TV
avllllblt, offloa houN 11 pouiblo IO,omto4 pmtnd7pmlol
pm Mondoy·Frltlov, CoN 114441·2741 or loouo ' " -·

-lid -

Nlcotv lumllhod moblo homo.
1H. lpt .. ctntl'81 air 1nd hut In
city. odultl only. Coli &amp;14·4410331.
Rod-otod opt .. 2 bdr., 1110
to 1210. Coli 304-171·&amp;1 04 or
304·17&amp;·8311 or 304·171·
7111.
.
U-/ro unfumlllhod llfl1 .. ,Cot·
pmd.- Ill utllltiOI pold. ; no
dllld,.,.
caw 114-441·
1137.

no.,....

F-ed opt. 2bdr.. 131*4111.
OoHipoHo. 1118 wotoroeld. Col
441·4411 ioft• 7PM.

R--

hou•.
-lrM.

I RHJm
open g . . . .. In
Cv""""nlty,
By own.,. Mutt Mll-movM. 3 Ind dopolic
CoH 114bdr. ' r1nch, ont cer Qlrlgt, 11&amp;-3848.

61

H

h ld
OUI8 0

G

d

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
loloo ond cltolro priced hom
*218. to e11a. Tobl•, 180 ond
tiP to t121. Hld•o·bodo.t380.
tnd up to tllfO .. 10f1 btdl
•141, Pteolfntn. e221. to
t371 .. Lompo fn&gt;m Ue. to
•121. pc. dtnltt• from 1101..
.,4l!S.7pc.I1Hondup. Wood
llblo Jla oltllro 121&amp; to
174&amp;. Dllk UIO tiP to 1226.
11110. Bunk bod com...... with - · 1271.
..... tiP 10 138&amp;. loby botll.
•110. Mettrttatl or boll
opdn111. full or twin, tl3 .. flrm,
173. oncf t13. Q - - ·
U21. 4' dr. ch•ll. •48. 8 dr.
chttts. 158 . Bed framu,
120.ond 121 .. 10 gun • 0..,
cabinet•. 13150. Ott or eltctrlc
r'llllll 1371. hby ln1ttr...,1,
U&amp; • 13&amp;. bod lrom• 120,
121. • no. king tr.mo t~o.
Good ....c11on of bedroom
tulttt, rock•l. rnttlll Olblnltt.
hotidbo- t38 • up to tS&amp;.

Hutolt•.

UMd fumllure·· D,....,•• btcl.
rnelll offlol delkt. 3 mUM out
Butevllt Rd . Open S.m to lpm,
M..,.thn:Sot.
&amp;14·441·0322

GOOD UIED APPUANCES
W•hlrt. dryert, retrig•110r1,
range1 . lk111• Applltncu,
Upper River Rd. btllda Stone
Croot M-. &amp;14·448·7398.
County Applltnce. Inc. · Oood
utld eppllance~ end TV 1tt1.
Opon lAM to IPM. Mtin thN

.... 114-448·1889, 827 3rtl.
Avo. Oo/llpolll. OH.

Wllhll' • dryer Ill 1185,

walh• t711, kenmore wuhtr
111. kMIIIDre wuhtr Ike new
1171. kenmore dlahwuher
IN, tide · by skle Admlr81
........... etiiO, 2 dr. Phlloo
m.lgn"'r til, Frldolro rofrlg.,..., .... 30 in. "'""'· rlntt
.... 30 in . .......... t71. 31/n.
1• Ill . S k - AJ&gt;·
pllonco Uppor Rlvor. Rd. 114·
441-7381.

SWAIN
AUCTION • I'IJRNITURE 12
Olluo St., Oolllpollo. Now• ulld
wood c111 nvvw. t pc wood LR
oulto 1389: bunk- 1199.
entron rec:Hn.. Ill, ,_., a
ulld bedroom tul1•. ranpa,

t..rgt IIi room uptllitt apt.,
fumlohod kltdlon, t200 mo.
plvo 1111-. 2311ot. Auo. Not.
• dop, no po10. Coli 114-441-4121. '

FIOftlllhed IP'. 120 4tll Avo ..
Olllpolil, ona bdr., UIO, ·utili·

tilt pold, odutto. CoM 441·4411
oft• 7PM.

3 rooma a ts.th II new carpet.
privl1t. IH u1Mit1e1 Plkl, ac:ept:
oloclrlc. Coiii14-448·711S.
Etfenclency apartmen1 . 2
JOOIM, b..h. fu. baMmWI1.
Fumlohed. In Po-.y . K....,._ 114-112-1211 orll4·
892·7314.

I oncf 2 bodraorn lumllhed
tptl. lnd houte In Mlddlaport,
CoO 114·H2· &amp;304 or &amp;14·
441·18&amp;2.

-

2 botl-111 t.nlllhod opl. In
M/ddloport. AllutiiHioopold. Coli
114·892-11014.

ltom•.

.APAIITI!IENT1. mollllo
hou... Pt. Pl....nt:andOelllpo111. 114-44&amp;-1221 .

for Sale

w
1410 Ohio, 1 -.om. !Mild

wotor. 1200 ..., rnontll .....
NEW AND UBED MOilLE
Kfii.EL'S QUALITY
HOME 8AlE8. 4 MI.
OALUPOUI, RT 38.
114·441-7274.

d~··
TOWN • COUNTRY
RIAL EITATE,
lrobr, 171·1141

'

,.

Vllley fumltur1, new • utld.
Lorge of .....lty tum~
lure. 1211 EIUtrn A••·•

a..,...

.

;

--.,....,..-----"7'
\'
Choir(
17,000 mi. cOil :-~ :

. 78

IYO.

66

Pete for Sale

B~II!&gt;Otdl K..,.olo All-broOct
grooming. Adultl • pupploo.
Engltlh Cocker Soenl..,, 388- ?tj
t 0.
Orqonwynd Cettuy Kennel .
CFA ·Himtllyln, Ptralan and
Sl1m... ldtttns. AKC Chow
pupp/oo. Co~ "1·3144 ohor
7PM.

111ft

ott.. 1:30 814-441·3243. · ,

-::c--::---:-----: .,,
Ford Cuotomlzod VIII, ".'
•••· 13,111. C111 814-'-419812.
,, , ,,

Loold"ll for fornolo Englloh lul-

tdog wkh ,...,., Reg. Pug for
11Vd llrvlct. Clil 114-24&amp;·

1071.
1h Bttglt &amp; 'A Collie • Hulkey

pup1. Jult bMn wean•. ., 0

ooc:h. Rog. block • P.. J.
neM no .,..,...., 7 months aid,
12&amp;. Col/114·44&amp;-0411 .

AKC REg .. Lh- Apoo pupplu.
I Mlk eokl. wort'ltld, tim
lhota. 1 malt, 1 femlle. c.n
&amp;14-441-070&amp;.
Burroe. 1·8 mo. m-'e· 1·18 mo .
melo. Vory gontlo ond wol)
monnorod. 114·742·2&amp;77.

I .II"'
S

Sii!J!Iill':,

[IVI':,Ii/1

k

' 1•:

81

Home
Improvement•

1'•

•

Farm

5"\

-------f.of:.•• l
BASEMENT
. • , •,
WATERPIIOOPINO
r, :
Unoondltlonol Nfotlmor

t•. Lot:ol roleron- t.nlohoil

~•

Froo - . . Ctll
oolloct • ~·~
1·114-237-0418.
tfoy or
Rager1
Wotorproofltlg.
~·

••••m•n;t!'J

Equipment ·

J.lnd L ln1101111on. Roofltlll\ '\:

:0..'.\..~J;.."o;:= ~· ,.

&amp; co,..~ete lint of new • used
equlpmln1. LargMt Mltctlon In

Pump •1•1 ..mot. Rtgiltlrid'~ ~
in Ohio. All _.. guor-. , , '1Coll 304·273·2811. Ronne..,(,
wood. W. Vt.
."L""

40 uaed tractors to lihoONfrom

S .f . Ohio.

.

63

_..; :~

814·112-2772,

•,\It

COLEMAN WATER WEtl
DRILUNO

"'. ~· ~

'j
,,

~~~~~--~----~·

ROM'S Ttlevl1lon lerv101,· ~. •
Hou•Spoolollog
colo on InRCA.
O••nn
OE.
Zotllth.
COl ::, .,.

Livettock

64

China clbintt IJIC . cond.

Colll14·245·11071 .

noo.

Hay •

Large round bllln of h•r t20 u .
CJIIII4·448-10t2- IPM.

Top quoN~y -dhloned mlaod
hoy. 11.30 por bolo. Col 114841·30H ol1ot &amp;:00 p.m.

Hou• cotl. Lump •miter. Zinn
Cool Co. Cllll14·441-14011.

Ool hoy end oHolfooooltood grooo
milled hOy. CoR 814·187·11114.

Colllh•'• uooil Tire 111op. o 1.000-.-12.13.14, 11.
II. 11.1 . 8 mlloo out Rl. ~18 .
Colli I 4-211·1211 .

Ground .., CXJm,

1 •13.

10n;

M2.10 ~ton; 122. 1.4 ton. Your
· Minimum &amp;00 lbo, Long
lonom, Ohio &amp;14·111-3111.

Hay for 1111. Eutlllftl
Llrge round btl•. 120.
114-742·2877.

r•llty.
1215.

For IOio Kindlowood otove. 1/ko
...,., und 2 montha, ln1tn or
lroo otondlng. Coli 814·441·
0311.

FirwwOOd t40 told dtllvtred.
Llndtolping. Get your frte
MIIINIII NOW for IIJ'ino end
- - Col 114·441· 1789 doyo
ori14·448---S.
Mlaod-ooclllollo,l12. por
buMio, 'oontoinlng oppro1. 1~
ton, fo~. Ohio Co .. Porvy, Ohio. Pllono 114·912·
1411 .

65

f!

Bull~lng Suppliaa

·-llli-

- •

~..cod

Grain

Miac. Merchandile

114

''

RINaLEI'I
Antique•

1

CROSS. SONS
3&amp; W•t, Joct&lt;oon. Ol!lo.
814·281·84&amp;1 .
MIIJIY Fargueon, New Holland,
lulh Hog 81/oo llloM ... o..

u.s.

...~~~ ·\
I~~.:,:

Auto• for Sale

1883 rtvmoum T........ 2 .2. 6
IPd, 42,000 miS.. Ctll 11•·
441-7.14 afttr 4pm,
1111 Cor¥alr good oond.. new
tlr•. new Nttery, M.:t1 tune
up, 7&amp;,000 m._, 11100 . Coli

114·M&amp;· II071.

Rotooy "' ooble , tool tfrllllqg,, .
Moot_o.....,...od-o_doyY
.............. · 304111-3102

-·-d. . . _.,

Clot · your aorpol in lhlp oltopo
with c.,..ln IJtNm•. furnttU,.

304·1'ft·ZU&amp;.

82

Plumbing
• Hutlng

CARTER'S PLUM liNG , " . ~
AND HEATING
.''
Cor. Four1h 1nc1 Pint
Oollpollo. Ohio
Phon• 11•·.&amp;41·3BD or 114441·4477

1971 Toyotl I tpd., 1 owntr,
189&amp; .. c.. &amp;14·448·9812.

83

1171 AMC Matador, PS, PI,
AC. 4 dr . CIH &amp;14·211·1191 .
3·1111 Muatangs. will ..11
paclltt• for •1150 or pert ou1.
Colll"·37f.2130.

1111 AMC Conoord DL 11110,
-•IIIPo. Aoltlngti.IOO.Coll
114· 2111· 1832 4PM.
78 Ford PiniO blocO with rod
llrip•, runs &amp; lookl good,
01100. Co~ a 10 10 PM. 814441·44&amp;2.
1112 Camtro, lhtl'lll. AM·FM
sttreo, AC, c:ruille, V-1, n.w
t/roo , mull •"· Coli 814-44&amp;·
3711 .

1111 whho Mulllnt with rod
Interior. A· 1 condition. 11•·
742-2321.

=--=--------

71 Pinto ... pll. .... 1100.

304,878·:1304 or 87&amp;·1211 .

1118 Ford Eocon. 4 "'' block
with rod pin 11rip0, AM·FM

_ .... ., u,aoo.

c.~

pot 304-ll7· 302t.

"'• 4

1tl1 Z 21 ClmMO, pow11
lllerlng. pe.... ....... pGWif
windows,
auto., new tires.
Pltono 304-•&amp;·3441 .

*·

72

EVENING
7:00 I]J Courtohip of Eddlo'e
"' Father
@ SportoContor
CIJ Entortolnmont Tonight
Interview
with
Martin
Sheen.
(!) 0 Cll WhNI of Fortune
Cll SCTV Network
® Eyowllnooo Nowo
(J]) MocNoi~Lohror Newohour
at (iJl Divorce Court
81 Jefforaono
CIJ Mary Tyler Moore
(]) Pleaae Don't Eat Oaiei11
@ Action Sporto· of 1he
80'1: I 9B5 Pro Ski Chern·
plonlftlp
(I) Now Newlywed Garno
(!) D Cll Jeopardy
(I) NlghdV Buolnoll Report
liD WhMI ol Fortune
IIIIHI Prloo 11 Right
fll WKRP In Clnclnno11
(MAXI MOVIE: 'Tho Bugl
Bunny I Road Runner

C • M Cltlltlng • FumRopolo. Allo plumbing. 10 yro.
IXplrltnc• . Call 11•·281·
1'&amp;1 .

1974 Ford Country lqu/rutotlonweoon. 11.000. txc. c:ond.
Col 114-448-0254.

Oood·1

Excavating
E~~:ctvdng,

biiiM.,.tl.
footerw, driwwayL Mptlc tlnkl.
ltndoooplng. Coli onyt/mo 114· ,
441-4137, J•m• L. Da¥61on,
Jr. owner.

86

Generel Hauling

J1m11 loy1 w... 8trvla.. Alto
poole flllod. Coiiii4·2SI· 1141
or 114·441·1171 Of 814-4417911 .

Ktn'l Wit., lerviot.

w....

Otlttma.. .pools fllltc:l. Phont
114-3&amp;7-0823 or 114·317·
n41 night Of dty.

w.,.,

Weugh' s
Service. Willi.
ctlterna. poolt. Felt. rllltble
........ CoM 114·211-1240 or
114·2&amp;1-1110. Roooonoblo
rt111.

lt. "'

ou,.._ uuck urvtce now .Nell•

bit. w/1 houl g...,.., Mnd. 1111
dltt, cool. .... Coli 114-448,.47.
.
'
"',j

87

Upholatery

••

TAIITATE
"UPHOLinRY IHOP
1113 Soc. Awo. OoliiJI&lt;&gt;IIo
114-441-7133
114-441
1133.
•

0;

Movie'

Ill Sonford and Son
GID &lt;Il King Orengo JemborM

V-1. PI, PI,
eeeo. can

Parade

Barbara
Eden and Joe Gareg iola
holt the annual parade
from Mioml . FL. (6 0 min I
I]J Dokterl
@ AWA Wroo111ng
CIJ OI IHI Who'o tht Bo11l
tCC, Mona reoelvel an lnheri1ance from a mylter·
iout bentfactor. (A).
G (I) ® Sllr CriiY When
Ha rry and Skip uerch tor
an honnt person to ouhln
a winn ing IOttlrV li c ket for
them. they encounter 11
woman with multiple pe r·
onalitiet. (80 min.)
I]) MooNoii-Lohrer Ntwlh·
our
[f)
Nov1:
Antarctica:
Eorth'o Lilt Frontier ICC)
An1trctica It a wildern ttl
, of Ice larger than the Un·
ittd Stetet and MtKico
comblnad. (80 mln .J (AJ .
foil MOVIE: 'Whol'o Now
Puaoyoetr
_,
(HBO) MOVIE: 'Tho Woman
In Rod' (CCI
(I) AII·Amerioen Bowl:
Georgia T.oh va. Michigan
Stall
Live from
Bir·
·,• mlnghem. Ale . (2 hrs .. 55
mln .)_L.ive.
·
(I) 111 &lt;I2J Growing Polno
(CCI Corol'o ' hopoo to bo •
wrilar are cru1hed by Mag·
gie·• honest critlcilm of
Carol's work. (R).
9:00 G I])(!) Tho A·Toom (CCI
Murdock po111 111n even·
gelltt and leadt t group of
hobot in a 1cheme to ret·

..

'

CUI

Truck• for Salt
R • M Fumlturo MoiMif-rfng
lt. Rt. 7 · Crown City Oh CoN
114·2111·1470..... i ... .114448 · 3431 , . Old • now
Upltoottrod.

venge on her former fin an·
cial adviser and winds up
in a high-stakes card game.
[60 min.l (R).

12/31 /85

JIM'S PWMIINO. HEATING.
Rt. 1. loa 3&amp;5, llolllpollo. Col
114-387·0&amp;71.

C • M Clttnlnrg • Fum.C• ~,_
R.,llr. Allo plumbing. 10 yrl.' .:•
lllparltnct . Call 114-ZII ·
1311 .

77 Portl O....odo 4 tfr.. nohort bli&gt;dt. Coli 114·4414489.

Ei•ening Television L i s t i n g s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Bllrkl TMe and L1wn ltMot,
llndocoplng. 304-&amp;78-2010 . •.

..

71

soap!

1

nfll\1:, ,

61

She smell like
Papa's shavin'

~--~~-------+'1, ( :

53

IIDdl, ltrtak. ..,., pip•. win·
- - . o t o. CioutfoWin·
toro. Rio Orondo, 0. Col 114·
24&amp;·&amp;121 .

..... &lt;

, • • t&gt;",i
·. .
'o~ •.
78 Ford F·2110 4114, 4 IPd.. a!j; ,
V-8. c.u ·11•·248·1214 w ,
114·24&amp;·11113.
,.
1n1

Folly T- Tritlllnlng, 11u. . ~'
- o l. CIII304·871·13SI. ,

-

room·khchlft aomblnl1ton eni
bltlt. R - poyo jll-o ond

·:

~53;37;::.:;:;=::;;:::;;::;;;;::;~-~ - •
73 y
• 4 W 0 •i

Hog roody 10 butcher. 4Dc lb.
304·171·4211.

IMngNom
wrtogor -_,...
· • f1n-•aH.
·--

;:o,

..... dopoolt.

Blodt, brick. mortor ond m•
sonry .uppll•. Moun11in Stt1e
llodt. Rt. 33. Now Hoven, w.
Vo. 304·112·2222.

- ··1

'otov•.
-•· o
l i o - cool • Colll14·oM8·31&amp;1.

oil.-"' ....-

..., -

114•440-:2;783. ;

or

304-178·4111. · J ·
--"""
· ~
I,
I 912 Joop Welt 10 • 4 Ill· • ,
w1t1o1 driuo, n o w - ·
1
unlw-lo,
olr, om-fm
_ . , ...
t11c:.
lntlrlor,
lock·ki·ID«*·~ '
hubl. Boob'forll,o\OO. Ask~t~ :
14,800. 304-773·5944or77;t-. '

304-171-2311 or 114-441• 1 '24154.
'
~ ...

welking distinct from North
0.11/o High School. Roducod to Hou• «apt. for rent. FumWald 2 br oport- in Hond.,_,,
129.900. Col/114-311·1711 , or unfurnlohod. 114·112·2381
304·17&amp;·1972.
doyo or 114-112·1723 ow•.
lew 10 ~tl flathlng1now
4 bedroom hoUie for Ull,
Nlot 1 and 2 br tpart:menft lillnt.la,lll UflttM, non•tnow
flrepl.c;:t, 3 mi. lOUth of O•Kipo- I room ltou11 iUtd- in Roolno d - - . . 304·171·2211 , 0211. Unlighted 1211. IFrot
1/o, U2.1100. CoH diVI &amp;14· oroo. A•-J._.,4th. Colt · 1·1
..,_,, . . . Jootlly , 1800)423·
448·1115 or n/grlto 114·448- 114·812·1118.
'
- - - - - - - - - 0111. onytlmo. 11001 121·
1244.
Mitldloport N. 4th Avonut. 2 2121 ..... 1104.
bldroom. fumlstled ep111mant,
Government HonN from •1
304-112·2511.
TONY' I GUN REPAIRS, hot dip
CU·NpllrJ. Also dl41quent tall
rollluolng.
property. Col/ · IO&amp;·U7-IOOO
worll, flit - · 304-17&amp;·
EJrt. OH·otll2 for lnform~tlon .
45 Furnlehed Rooma 4&amp;31
.
: - - - - : - - - -·lea, owner. Atmodelld 3 bNroomhouHon At. 33 . NIWF.A, bedroom. F.A. h... _..., For :ont &amp;looping Room• iUtd Lun~p houM coli. llm•tont,
light ltouoo hoping roomo. Pork erewt. •net dtlnr.d, ont ton
fumtct, ltrgt 101. •23,000. dopooH. 1210. OKHdh. 814Cantral Hlrtel. Call 114·«1· tnd up, Jim Lonlof, 304·17&amp;·
742· 2177.
Coi/1C1 114-423-1288. ·
72t7 .. 17&amp;-1247.
0751.
-;:---;--;-:----·lc'
ly owf11r.' Btltaly, 3 b.clroom Efllciency. c:ot1age , 1'111 .00
ltou""ooplng room,
ro- lurplut· Cerhen~ Army · DHim
houH 1t 10 E. St. in Pom•or. lS WHII, utilltitt peld, phone 304·
frtD .• ihtrt beth. m•
"'ed, clothing. llntulated Decron
WOOdld ICrll, flfllily ~room. 1711-3100 01' 171·1101. .
utilldoo PI!- 11 u . 111 441· . . . . . oamoutt.ae.........
dining room, F.A. hNt. 2 bl1ha.
12&amp;.00j. liom aob.......... llflgt. 127.000. Large houae •nd .,.........,, 4411,ottf7pm.
rvlllt'l, East·Riventwood,
CoiiOC1 114-423-1219.
unfurnllhed. 304·171·1311,
J - lnd...... t1on.. Rood·
Old Rt. 21 , Fri, lot. lun,
46 Space for Rent
R1. 2, Altlton, ArrinotOn HouH, HOUIEI FOR RENT: 811 WH1:00·7 :00 PM l101dl X"'"' ott..
3 bedroom1. 1~ btttu, modern Iow Lant, 3 bedroome, hint
&amp;:00 PM - ) . FR !! OELIV·
khchtn. bellm.nt. 1 pcre ptu1, room. blth. tlt·in tcltd'IMI wftfll
ERY, )04· &amp;7&amp;-3334 IKido
priced in tht 40's. 'Clyde Bowen, Wllh• end dryer hookupl end
Moltlla home tot, 12•x10• or c.,.,..llotlot.
Jr., 304-571·2331.
c.,ort. Renter paystlact:rlclftd
"'""""'· 171 -tor Otld, 4th •
water. t200 per month plue
Noll, Oolllpollo. Coli 441·4411 1t" - o oolor RCA TV.
,
7 room end btth hou11, loclted d~H
oftoriPM.
1110. 304·871-2118.
711 Viand, 3 bldroome, bath,
208 Fifth St., New Haven,
living
room,
dining
room.
~
304·812· 2748.
Mobllt hofnl lot In Rto Ortnde, OUHn alit wetlfbed 1171. C.H
Ch.,, llundry room, lnd b..
Ohio. Cll/&amp;14-441-1!112.
oltot 1:00, 304·171·3714.
Llroi ctlarrNng okltr home, exc. m~nt. Ram.r ...,. •••· PI
locetlon. many JH*Ib'ltltl 2 tnd oloctric. 12110 ..., COUNTNY MOilLE Homt Pork. 14" oofo. lull li1o Hldobod.
18rga 5ots. mid 170'a. Cell pluo dopoolt.
ftOU1e 33, Not1h of Pomeroy.
1102 Yl11td, 3 bod-mo. 2
304-&amp;75-&amp;111.
Lorgoloto. Coli 114·112·7471. 304·171·3212.
b1tha, Mvlno room, dining room,
GE ...,..... and dryer, working.
Exterior complttt • Interior tlrftflly room au ldtehlft with
t300. 304·178·2111 or 171·
roody 10 c-l01o. AN b~ol&lt;. wiiMr an• dryl;r hootu,. ".,..
1000.
onorvy offlolont - - . o m lor ......... ........... .
Rench• elttlng on 1 ecre. PriOid 1178pot-luod-"·
lertou1 ~ losing wtlgt.11
f.PAIITMENTI I'OR RENT:
on inopoctlon only. 304·171·
Conuct Otorta Orate. fit. 2,-..
2101 Jo...._ Auo.. 2 bod2911 .
212. Lotort, wv.' 21211. 304o
51 Houeehold Gooda ii2-S112.
'room,
" - ·r.nter
- · P11Yiet.ctr1c.
....... tnd !lYing
UIO

32 Mobile Homee

Ohio 810k0f. Yonl 01 doll'l......
comont blocltl ond building
m111r111. OoH/t&gt;OIII llool&lt; Co..
Plno St .. GoRipollo, Ohio CoM

1e1ec'-'"'"'"''~ ...... .,.,
rod • - · t2,300.

Reg. Morgen m.,a for ule. CaR
&amp;14· 371·21115 .

Apt, fot rent in HendMIIOft, WV,
lUI mo. Colll14-41·1. .2.

... obcfr. offlclonoyoPI. CIH
114·441·0380.

B 'ld'
S
1
Ul tng Uppi&amp;S

KentUcky iump, OhkJ Lump.

IUIO

Delu111 2 INir. downtOwn, com·
...... kltohOft,· -........
dryor. - . AC. 1!~­
-/nd, Coli doyo 114-441·
4311, - · • wiOfl- 114441·0131.

no,...,eduho.A-Ooc.' l .
Cll/114·448·1&amp;11.
'

66

00 I

Stove lncl Nfrigl'rltor aolkl
wood triple cfroOoOr ond m01clt·
ing olt•t. Col 814·441· 7127 .

Fum- 1111.. 4 , _ l ......

.

r-;e;..~~~. ~··..~· ~;;~~f;.;=;~;:;:;:~~,

'-ciAVo. 3bdr .. I1DO
rtctUirod. can 114·
441·4222 W un I a 1 .

mo.. dot&gt;.

Portlolly lumllhod. 114·1t2·
1218 .. 814-tl2·7314.
Hom11 for Sele

For rant wtth optiolll to buy. 2 br
*131. month. Wattr furnllhecf.
Coli oftor 4:30 p.m. 304·87&amp;·
1101.

740~

flt~lll.·lo

In Mln•tvilt. by the Bulk pl.nt.
1 btclroom hou11. Total electric.

31

2 blcfroo"' mobh ltomt ntlf
Rot*lt. 114-112-IUI.

c.n

3 bdr. home Wtlk·in ctdlf
HOME OWNERS·Refln.nce to
low fiJI:ed rltt. UMequlty for any
pu'l)oll. Ltad., Morlgege Co.,
814· 592·30&amp;1 .

Oootl, o'-. 3 ..,...._,fur·
nlllh~. A .C .. ooml prlvotllot. 1
child, no potl. 3 mlllt obovo
Now Hewn Rt. 33- tll8. por
montl!. Col 304-112-2411.

MQaiLE HOMES MOVED: lnturtd. re..onablt m-.
304·571·2331

Furnllhed houte, 241 JHillon

21

mo.ltu•

2 bdr. uail«.' t110
dopM!t. CIISI4-371·Z43 .

room.

hid eamingt. Frtnge benlfha.
co,..ny trelnint Mel m..,eg ..
rMn1 opportunhl•. Cell 304731·M91. 8:30-4:30 EOE.

lt1t

-:----:-:----·lc-

0

2 bcfr. 1u1ty fumlllhed. UaU,
_.,_ · U...... Rhior Rd ..
,...., pold, ooc. dop. ooqulred.
Cd 114·········

;;=~;;;:;;;:;;;;~==r::;;;;;:;:;;;::;;:=:1 g;'o~:.~w·II1S:

WMI care for tht lldMy In my
....... Coli &amp;14-892-2413.

7111 / tln

IHE QUALITY
PIINI SHOP

Racine,

champion was having mari"
tal troubles ' "

Mvalope: El1n VIUII-711 3418

c....... Ollie

,.

.., .,.,., ,~.,.,_," ,z . ~

"I'm sorry, yat es. Last years
'
.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·6601
1-1! tin

P~.

" '" ' .. ·"4'u•.•n1,.,.., .... '""

Television Usteni~J Devices
Computerized Heari~J Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All A&amp;es

"i:z

0

Mobile Homes
for .Rent

Futnlllhod, AC, Clblo. no city
tun. bootrtlful ¥low In
K._o. M'*ll• Homo
Port. Cll814-44t-11102.

Full lime laxidtrmist
Ct~mptll

The

TRACY

THE TAXIDERMY SHOP

9:00 A.M. • 6:00 P.M.

December 31

•

Ha"nl~ll ,

WhO

hll

been marlt:'ed for dtath by a
p.,amllltary goon 1quad.
(80 mln.l (A).
I]) 700 Club
CIJ 111 IHl Moonlighting
(CCI Moddlo oookt rl•

low. the •our Tops end the

Tem~tations. 190 min .)
D (I) G) Htppy New YNr
Amerip.e AI Jarreau. Kermit
the Frog. Sheila E. and
Louise Mandrell hott this
countdown to 1986 from

D (J) Shellov Long/Michool

*

Keaton In Zany, Sexy

Comodyl NIGHT SHIFT

CBS

D Cll ®

New

•o..

MOVIE: 'Night

Shill'

CIJ Studio 8o11ion w ith
Mitch Miller
liD Evening et Pops Sarah
Vaughln and Wynton Mars,a tis join John Williams
and the Boston Pops for an
evening of music. (60 min.)
(RI.
IMAXI MOVIE: ' Rovongo of
lito Nordo' (CCI
9 :30 @ NHL Hockey: Philo~ol·
phla at Edmonton ·
(HBO) Not NeceaMrlly the

Year In Rovlow The NNTN
news team takes their annual look at the pest twelve
montht,
10:00 B ID(!) Remington StNlo
After appeari ng to w itness
a tyc;oon 's 1hoo1ing, two
tinging-telegram g irls hire
Laura lnd Remington fo r
protection. (60 min.) (R). In
Stereo.
Cll iii iHI SponHr. For Hire
(CCJ Spenser's 1earch for
two teenage lovers leads
h im into a potentially
deadly tltuation. (80 min.)
lA).
(]) Dencin' Man
(I]) To Be Announced
fll Odd Couple
(HBOJ 1at &amp; Ten: Not Quite
M r. Right Is Diane too
much in love to concentrate on fo otball.
10:30 ()) Colobrley Chofo
fiiiNNNowo
.
IHBOJ Otorgl Burn I in Concon
JMAXJ Album Flooh: Stovlo
Wonder New 11ldeo1 from
Stevie Wonder '• lstett elburn 'In Square Circle' ere
featured, along with e:w:clu·
tive interviews and back·
s tage visits with the Olear
and Grammy w inner.
11:00 G 1D NowoConler
I]J Mon from U.N.C.LE
(I) MOVIE: 'Tho Bonny
Goodman Stor(
CIJ (!) 8 Cll 01 \I)) Nowo
CIJ Indigo
(]) Eyewltnlll Newe
(J]) Now YNrl Eve Jou
Colobrotlon
Gl Bonny Hill Show
(MAXI MOVIE: 'No &amp;moll
Affol( (CC)
11:30 G 1D (!) Tho Tonight
Show Tonlght't guettl ere
taurl Bran igan, 8 .8 . King,
•nd comedian Marty Pol·
llo. (80 min .) In Stereo.
(1) 111 (1]1 Diok Clork'o Now
YN(O Rookln' Evo 'Be Dick
Clerk tnd co-hosts Emma
Samms end Tad McGinley
welcome the new veer with
musical que It~ 81rry Mani ·

York

City,

Times

Square. Disney World and
Texes.. (2 hrs.)

fll

Toxl
12:00 (I) Beat of Groucho
fll Gunomoko
12:30 G 1D (!) lote Night ·will&gt;
David L..ttermen Tonight'•
guests Ire Connie Chung
and comedian Emo Phil·
l_!ps. (60 min.) (R), In Stereo.
C!J Compoq Sporto: Sport•

page '85
12:35 JHBOI Whoopi Goldberg DlrK1 from Broadwey
,1 2:45 (MAX) MOVIE: 'Cannon bell
Run II' (CCI
1:00 I]J Bill Done
CIJ Entonolnmont Tonight
Interview
with
Martin
Sheen .
0) IHl CNN Nowl
fJ1 MOVIE: 'The Time
Machine'
1:30 (]] Lov. Thlt Bob
(I) MOVIE: •Night and Day•
(I) New1
Stovon
Wright
1:40 (HBO)
Steven Wrigt'tt offers hit
laid-back obtervatlons on
life. (60 min.l
2 :00 I]J 700 Club
(!) Mude SportoLook
2 :30 (!) SportoCantor
2 :35 (MAXI MOVIE: 'Choooo Mo'
2 :40 (HBOJ Detroit Comody Jim
3 :00 I]J MOVIE: ·s~o Door
CentMn'

(!) NHL Hockey: Phlloclo~
phla 11 Edmon1on
fll MOVIE: 'Tho Mloflll'
3:48 IHBOI MOVIE: 'Tho Bounty'
4 , 15
4 :35

~C) MOVIE:

'The Hom
Blowe ol Mldnlghl'
IMAXI MOVIE: 'End Gomo'

1/1/86
EYENINQ
7:0D @ SportoConlor
Cll Entortolnmtnl Tonight

7:08
7:30

7 :35
8:00

Interview with country inuaic't hotteat duo, Tht
Juddt.
G (I) WhMI of Fartuno
Cll SCTV Nolwork
(JJ Eyewftn•u Newa
(J]) MocNol~Lehrer Nowtft.
our
Ill &lt;I2l Dlvoroo Court
C1J Mory Tyler Moore
@ NBA Todoy
C1J Now Nowtywod Olmo
G CIJ Joopordy
I]) Nightly Buoln... R-n
® Wh. .l of Fortune
Ill (1]1 Prloo II Right
(I) Sonford ond Son
G 1D Hlghwoy to HN(I) Bodybuilding: 1985 Mr.
UnlvlrM
Compedtlon
Competition from Sweden.
(2 hro.)
Cll Ill (1]1 suoor lowl:
Miami v•. Ten"""" Live

(HBOI Tho Evo~y BI'O'Ihora
Reunion Cone4N't Phil end
Don Everly were reunited
on stage for the the fi rst
time in ten yeart II Lon-

from New Orloono. 13 hl'l..
Hii min.)
(I) The Oraneelowt: Penn
Stltl va. Okllhoml live
from Miami, FL. (3 hra.)
•([)II) Mary Mary iiiUr·
prised when drama c:rltic
Ed LaSalle givH her hil
tickttl for 1 play he is luppolld to review.
Cll MocNei~Lehrer - • h·
our
(J]) Korolon Conducta tho
Alplno SymphOny Horban
von Karajen conducts the
Berlin Philharmonic in 1
concert performance of Ri·
chard Strauu· Alpine Symphony. (80 min.! lA). In

~··~·,t
lly THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

MOVIE:

'Endongored

(HIO) MOVIE: '20 10' (CCI
(MAXI
MOVIE: 'Swing
Tlmo'
8:05 Cll MOVIE: 'Tho Outlowo lo
Comln(_
8 :30 DCIJIID Hoppy Now Ynr,
Chortle Brown Charlie
Brown ttrugglea to c;om·
plete 1 huge homework 81·
1ignment while the other
kids ere plann ing e rousing
New Y11r'1 plrty.
9:00 e iD Holltown
(]) 700 Club
• CJ) I]D MOVIE: ' Intima~•
Stran_terw'
Cll (J]) Vlenno: A Now
Yuro
Colobrotlon
In
Storoo .
10:00 e iD SL Eloowhoro
(!J World Cup Skiing:
Womon'l Slolom Ccworago
from Leytim, Switztrllnd.
(60 min .J
(I) MOVIE: ' Any Wedne•
doy'
fll Odd Couple

J-

Fido~

,_Jour

by

tWALLUFt

) I. I
) ()

,_._ •( I
.I
Ylltttdi!Y s

33 Caddoan
Indian
3.t ('ert'al
plant
35 Cravat
rabri('
38 PunM,ent
40 Mirror
42 Wa.•h ,
.t3 Saltpeter
44 Follow
45 Put fo rth

DOWN

Honr!Amold lnd Bob Loo

I Beyond
2 Auk fi(e nus

DAILVCRYPTOQUOTES-Here's how to wort it : "
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

One letler slands for another In l his sample A Js used
for the three L's, X for the lwo o ·s. etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the word• are a ll
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYFI'OQUOTE
12-31

t)
j

K~'E Y S

QZM

Now llflllQI thl eire~ lettn to
rorrn thl.urprtM lniWir', u IUO"
gootod by tho......, ,..oon,

r I J-r I

J-

ron venunn

36 Czec h
rive r
37 Saucy
39 N.Z. nsh
.tl Hy hrid izP

garb

FT

tHESTOOt

26 Pe ach
c ity
varl f"ty
·on Go lden 27 Preordain
..
Z9 Actre~
Sacre&lt;l
Zadora
Egyptlllll
31
beelle

31 F'oul up

J

I I t

25 S trunk

20 Ruman ~an

rec ipient

[)

I ()

ventlon

28 Frigid
29 Sty
30 Pri f'Bt's

C=-"-:""'"'tolorm

LERIN

studio
6 Babble
7 Bard's
adverh
8 Circum·

19 Corrupt
21 Irish
23
rebel group
22 Blushing
24
23 Keats or YeaL&lt;
24 Trident
27 Bequest

ftflg~f!)it ~THATIICAAMILEDWOROCWIE

Unoco••ll&gt;lo

41)ke

5 Wo rkshop;

15 Rers coun t 9 Pens ioner
16 Grassland {2 Find
18 Get 'em ,
17 Purpose

Speclel'

~ ~ ~~·

3 VIewpoint

I Starchy
food
6 Reveragc
I 0 Apportion
II Unifonn
13 Roofing
matertal
14 Poetry muse

Stereo .
•

dan 's Royal Albert Hell.
(60 min.)
(MAXJ MOVIE: "The Canon
Club' (CCI
10:30 CD To Be Announced

I I I

U'W

xr

GYY

G

RfJW L ME

I D E M
LM

If'

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f'T

(J Z l i R A I ,

I Z F' DYS

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Til\' \'

Zr.VVC

G l

uRA, ._ E y
I Q M N M H I ., f!
Yeeterday'1 Cryptoquote: HAI'PINESS SNEAKS IN
BILGE FINAL PUSHER INHALE
THROUGH A DOOR YOU DlllNi KN O W YO I' I.EF'T
AnlvrMr. HI 1100p.a low bKauH he's •nxlouato dO ! OPE N. - ,.JOHN BARRYMOH'E
tn/1 - RISE HIGH
X

tAftlwerl tomorrow1 •

•

,

�Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Superiors

3 BIG DAYS

FRANKIE$.

. · Thursday, Friday &amp; Saturday
January 2-3-4

12 oz. pkg.

89&lt;

HOURS: 9:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.

Thank You

CHERRY PIE.
FILLING
12-21

01.

• ••

•
•

bag

FULL CASE

Stl oo

HALF CASE

$550

.•

Thorof .-.

TOMATO JUICE
24-1 0)A oz. cans .

$700
$35'0 ·

FUll CASE
HALF CASE

Thorofare

I

Fresh Regular

Crispy Serve

GROUND BEEF

SPARE RIBS

BACON

10 lb. box

1 lb. pkg.

All Purpose
,

SAUSAGE
5 lb. pkg.

fr.

'

~·

Ballards

HALF

CASE

ITEM

Thorofare

Florida

VEGETABLE SOUP

ORANGES

Thorofare

Kraft Sliced

CHICKEN NOODLE
SOUP
Variety of

NOODLES

AMERICAN CHEESE
Thorofare Whole Kernel
or Cream Style
24 ·3 oz .
pkgs.

6.00

3.00 CORN
Thorofare

PEAS
Franco American

SPAGHETTIOS

24 -14'.4
CAM I

sn

6.00

•
Caatleberry

BEEF STEW
Thorofare

SALnNE CRACKERS
California

CARROTS

, 2-24 oz .

cans

24-16 oz.
boxes

51b .
bag

YEUOW ONIONS

&amp;lb .
bag

VARIETY APPLES

&amp;lb.
bag

Thorofare

SJ2

PORK-N-BEANS
Thorofare

$15

7

KIDNEY BEANS
Thorofare

$, 1.69

$ .99

.APPliSAtKE
24-18 oz.

1 lb.

9&lt;

QUANTITY

FULL

CASE

HALF

CASE

SLICED CARROTS
Thorofare

SPINACH

ITEM

MACARONI
&amp; CHEESE

QUANTITY

FULL

HALF

CASE

CASE

Thorofare
&amp;lb.
beg

$ 1.99

&amp;lb.
box

S10.9S

Bush'•

SHELLIE BEANS
Taylor

24 -16 oz.
can•

a.oo

24-16 oz .

S10.00 s

can a

SCALLOPED
POTATOES

4.00 SWEET POTATOES
Loyalty

TOMATOES
Hormal

24·4 oz.

$12.00 $ 6.00 CHIU W/BEANS ·
Chef-Boy-Ar-Dee

24-16 oz.
cans

$ 9.00

24 -16 oz.

S10.00 $ 5.00 SAUERKRAUT

c1n1

PEPPERONI PIZZA
Silver Fleece

Ludl'a

24· 18 oz.
can a

$

24-18 oz.
cans

$

NAVY BEANS
7.00

Robin Hood

FLOUR

Thorofare

$ 1.99

$700
$350

Thorofare

Superior

Thorofare

PIECES &amp; STEMS
MUSHROOMS

•

24-16 oz.

HALF CASE

$129

S1Q8_9

'

GREEN BEANS

89&lt;
14-151b. avg.

CASE

Thorofare cut or FrHCh style

20-lb. bag

H

FULL

$300 .

(patties)

Semi-Boneless

QUANTITY

HALF CASE

FULL CASE

LINK6 SAUSAGE
lb. pkg.

ITEM

FUll CASE

•

sau

POTATOES

•

•
.·
$600 ••••

lall.rd

WHITE

...·~

. 24-1 0 3A oz. cans

S1Q89

79c
Storemade

TOMATO
SOUP

24· 7'1·

$ 1.00 $ 4.00

261b.
bag

FULL

HALF

CASE

CASE

$ 9.95

$42.00

24-BV. oz.
bOX I I

$ 7.00

12-32 oz .
btll.

$12.00

EVAPORATED

48-12 oz.
cans

$24,00

Crlaco

9-84 oz.
btls.

$36.00

'12·&amp;oz.

$10.00

MUFFIN MIX
5.00

QUANTITY

16'12
can a

PINK SALMON

Del Monte

CATSUP

6.00

Car111tlon

12-16 oz.
·cens

10· 11 lb.
bag a

$400

Old Time

24-16 oz.
cena

24· 17oz.
Cllna

FULL CASE

ITEM

24-17oz.
cena

24-16 oz .
can•

saoo

SUGAR

24-16 oz.
cena

12-16 oz.
cena

FULL CASE

Domino

12-&amp;Y, oz.
boxea

'

MILK

$21.00

OIL
Stove Top

STUFFING
Better Qipped

6.50 FISH
Longhorn

CHEESE

College Inn

Red Skin

CHICKEN BROTH

BOLOGNA

box as

II Lb.

Lb.

Lb.

$5.49

SU9

69 1

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