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                  <text>Page--.,-14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy_.:_Middleport, 'Ohio

Ohio saves $3.5 milliori
on state workers health
COLUMBUS. . Ohio (UPII F.ewer state employees had
Slirgery In l985 and those who were
blspitallzed didn't stay as bng, thus ·
meaning the state saved about $3.5
riuJUon lor Its employees enrolled in
the state's two health care plans.
Figures fronf the two plans show
a 36 percent drop In usage of
'hospital rooms - , from 853 days per
thousand employees In 1981 to 534
days per thousand w01kers In 1985.
Blue Cross of Central Ohio and
the Community Mutual Insurance
Co. administer the state's basic and
alternate health care plans.
"In 1981, the Celeste adminlstra.
tlon launched an aggressive and
comprehensive health. care cost
containment program," said Wll·
' llam G. Sykes, director of the
Department of Administrative Ser·
vices. "Our employees and their
familles have given their complete
cooperation resulting in a dramatic
decrease In health care costs."

•

Thursday, January 2. 1986.

~JANUARY CLEARANCE • JANUARY CLEARANCE • JANUARY CLEAR~NCE ··JANUARY CLEARANCE ·• JANUARY

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scrlbers nationally or in other parts
of tjle state, Sykes said. During the
same·-perlod, other members in
Blue Cross's central Ohio service
area had a 10 percent drop In
1"'1
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patient stays.
Tl)e cost Containment measures
adopted In July 1981 Include
mandatOry second surgical opln·
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lops for 12 selected surgical procec:0 .... '
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dures, lncentlves for more efficient
.methods of treatment, and precertification for hospital admission.
·.. The decrease In cost is due In
part to pre-certification. designed
LADIEs ·
to.prevent unneeded or unnecessar·
Uy long hospital stays. and to the
t11u-thlrd;j decrease In use of
!i
HAllMARK GIFlWRAP, BOXED ,
surgical procedures lor whlch a
Jeans shirts, sweat shirt looks, 1 CHRISTMAS CARDS " NAPKINS •
secon\J surgical opinion is re- · 11\
' Gowns, robes, teddies, pajamas, nite
· stzes
·
8
CUPS • PAPER PLATES • STUFFED '"'
quired," said Linda D. Walton, DAS J)
dressy knits an d more tn
shirts. dusters and bed jackets. Sizes
,deputy director lor personnel.
Z small to 4X .
thru 18.
TOYS • AND MORE. WHILE THEY m
An estimated 26,700 state em·
~
LAST! BRACHS CHRISTMAS CANDY ~
ploy~ are enrolled In the tradi.
tiona! and optional health rare ~ Reg . •10.00 SLEEPWEAR ...... '7.50
SHIRTS
INCLUDED.
~
plans. Other sta te workers with
r. Reg . '15 .00 SLEEPWEAR .. .. '12.00 j ' 9 '95
.............. '7 .31
n
health care coverage are enrolled
:;; Reg . '24.00 SLEEPWEAR .. .. •18.00 1 '14.95 SHIRTS ........... '10.991
~
The decrease in room utilization In one of 24 health mainl e~ce
J) Reg . '35.00 SLEEPWEAR .... •2'7 .00
*16 .95 SHIRTS ........... '12.59
cited by Blue Cross exceeds any organlzatklns serving employees
~
Reg.
'44
.00
SLEEPWEAR
..
:.
•33.00
1*18.95
SHIRTS ........... '13.99
~
decline documented for its sutJ. throughout the state.
-..-.........-~-.----..----_.._..'!"'_..._.__.... -·-~ · .-..--..---.+_.._.._.._._...__ __ ..__.._._..___ .. c:

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Cleara~ce

January Clearance! ·j . . January ·

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WINTER
SLEEPWEAR

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First firefighter in 11
years dies in line of duty
this tragedy." said Mayor George
\' . Voinovich. "Wea l! feE'! the loss of
a man who gave his life In thE' line of
duty. Pcscatrice was an aggressive
flrelighter ...
Two othE'r firefighters injured In
the blaze at Milner Elec tric Co.
were treated a t St. Vincent Charity
Hospital. Timothy O'Toole, 35.
fractured hls ankle. and Lee Moser,
35. cu r his hand .
"We all feel a big loss today.
Death is somethlng firefighters
have to learn to live with, but each
time it occurs. ~·e all feel it
personally." said Fire Chief James
J . McNamee.
Su rvlvors include Ihe fireighter's
\\ife Cheryl and daughter Nicole, 5.
Authorities had not determined
the exten t of damage to the
building, nor the cause d the fire.

Celeste names interim
.Liquor Control director
COLUMBUS. Ohio IUP! 1-John

R. Hall, a deputy of merchandising

t

h1 • tllo! ·Department of Liquor
Control, takes over Monday as the
hiterlrn director of the departmen 1.
Gov. Richard F. Celeste named
Hall to the job to replace Richard
Carey who left to become adminis·
trator of Port Columbus lnternati ·
ona Airport.
Hall. 60, a native of Portsmouth.
joined the Liquor Control Depart.
ment in February of 1981 and was
named deputy of merchandising in
November of that year .
"The prineipal thrust of the
Department of Liquor Control is
merchandising,· · Celeste sa id Tues·
day in announcing lhe action.
"John's experience in this area will
help build on the department's
reeord of exceiiE'nce undE'r this
administration."
Hall served as the chief of
managE'mE'n t and counst&gt;ling and
aetlng director of the Small Busi·
ness Administrat ion in ti)t' Colum·
bus District offiee. and as a
business analyst with the U.S.
Department of Commerce to pru·
vidE' counsE'ling with Oh io- basrd
businesses. Prior to his SBA

experience. Hall held supervisory
and enforcement positions in the
Liquor Department.
Hall has owned Gulkers retail
store in Portsmout h for 10 years, is
a former president of the Ports·
mouth Retail Merchants AsSO&lt;'ia ·
lion and a former member of the
board of directors of the Ports·
mouth Chamber of Comm erce.
"John brings a strong ad minis·
trative background as well as long
experience in business and state
I"'vernmenl." Celeste sa id.
Hall ha s been act iw in many
cl\·lc associations and orga niza ·
lions In Port smouth . HP L• a past
mcmbrr of the Portsmouth Board
of Educa tion. He and his wife Mary
have three children and live in
Portsmouth.
Ca rey. 57. a lieu tenant genera l in
the Marine Corps. was an origina l
Celeste appointee in 19&amp;3 from his
posit lon as ·a Marin£' rommanct&gt;r in
Quant ico. Va .
A native of Columbus. Carey
~radual ed from George Washing·
ion University with a degree in
busi n€'ss a dminis trati on. and
se~~ ed

in KorE"a and Vietnam with

the Marines.

Heart transplant
patient tloing well'
CINCINNATI (UP! I- A Buller
County man was "doing well "
today alter receiving a new heart in
a two-hour transpla nt operation
late Wednesday at the t.:niversity of
Cincinnati Medical Center.
Billie Whlte, 57, of Hamilton wa s
In critical but stable condition at the
hospital's cardiac intensive care
unit, said a hospital spokesman.
"The surgery went wf&gt;!l and Mr
White Is doing well. " said Dr. David
Melvin, who headed a !our-man
team which performed IhE' surgery.
The hE'art donor was an un idenli·
fled man In his 20s who died
Wednesday at Timken Mercy
Medical Center In Canton.
Melvin said White had sufferrd
hear t trouble for SE'IIeral years and
had undergorll' bypass surgery in
19'19. His condition had deteriorated
recently and only about 40 percent
of his heart was functionin g, the
surgeon said.
"White's heart was sick enough
that he couldn't get by without a
transplant but the rest of his body
was well enough to make It through
.tlJe !lllrgery," Melvin said.
"We told them ~White' s family 1
that he had less than a 00 percent
chanoe of living more than six

Edllorlal on Page 2

SennooeUe on Page 5

OU, Miami triumpl.t

New church pastor

College cage roundup on Page 4

Pholo, story on Page 6

ALL SALES FINAL- NO LAYAWAYS- NO EXCHANGES

aovs·

months " without thE' tran splan t. he
said.
Melvin said he telephoned White
about 3 p.m. WPdnPSday aft er
learning that a donor heart was
avatlable.
"He was anxious. excited and did
not S('{'m too nervou s."
Melvin and Dr. Edward Dunn&lt;'.
another llll'mher of the transplant
team. flew to Can ton •1a helicopter
to pick up the donor hear1 . They
retumPd ro Cincinnati about 7 p.m .
and the surgery began about a half·
hour later
The transplant was the second at
the hospital In just over two weeks .
A northern Kentucky man I'I'C('ivrd
a new heart on Dec. 17.

~ auESPORTSWEARNEs

KNIT SHIRTS I

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SKIRTS, JACKETS, BlOUSES, VESTS
and PANTS

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MISSY and nTRA SIZES.

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..:_ REG. '20.00 ...... SALE '13.40
~REG. '25.00 ...... SALE'16.75
c REG. '34.00 ..... . SALE '22.78

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LADIES'

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TER COATS
~ WIN
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&amp; JACKETS
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January Clearance of Junior,
Missy and Extra Size Coats
_and Jackets .

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!January Clearance

LADIEs'

BLOUSES

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MEN'S

SPORT SHIRTS

Nice selection of casual and dressy!
styles. Hurry in and SAVE .

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l '14.95 sHIRTs :..... sALE ' 10.99
' 17.95SHIRTS ...... SALE'13.24
1 '19.95 SHIRTS .. .. .. SALE '14.71

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By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel staff writer
To avoid employee layoffs, th£&gt; proposed 19S6
budget lor the Meigs County Highway Department
has been rev ised.
Phil Roberts, county engineer, Ted Warner and
Dave Spencer of the highway department, discussed
thE' situation Thursday with Meigs County
Commissioners.
The proposed 1986 budget calls lor a total
appropriation of $1,440,lXXJ including a carryover of
$65,00&gt; from 1985.
Last year's highway department appropriat ion
was $1,599,400.
The decrease in funding comes beca use the
county's collections from the state's auto license and
gasoline taxes will be less than In prior years

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LIMITED QUANDTIES
PRICED LOW FOR QUICK CLEARANCE

Cl earance

~our

Special rack of missy and
extra size sportswear by

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COLUMBUS. Ohio IUPl l Columbia Gas of Ohio's residential
and small business customers may
divide abou t $16 million in natural
gas rate savings thls year, thanks to
an agreement between the utility
and thE' Oh io Consumers' Counsel.
The set tlement, announced
Thursday and still subjl'!:l to
appmval by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio, provides that:
-Columbia will teduce It s bills
by rl million in 1986, providing
small monthly credi ts to custer
mers, and will freeze its base rates
until April 1987. In addition, the
utility will postpotlf' automatic rate
hikes for 189 COffilT\.Ur:tltles, saving
customers there another $9.2
mUllen.
-1n return, Consumers' Counsel
will drop lis appeal to the Ohio
Supreme Court lor a $13.4 million
refund to Columbi a customers for
"Imprudent " gas purchases and
will not challenge for two years lhl'
utility's pipeline connections for
new gas su pplies nor the past gas
pu rchases .
Consumer•' Counsel \Viiliam A.
Spratley said the PUCO could

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1 Devon, Dotty ann, enard ~
1 and Lady D~von .
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Choice

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s322s TO s·aaso 1_____________
l/2 PRICE J.I____1./2
PRICE
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MEN'S SIZES QUILT -LINED

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FLANNEL SHIRTS

P

Regular and extra large sizes, Regular and wes~ tern styles . Warm nylon quilt lining . Colorful
::o
plaid patterns.
J)
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21.95
.:
24.95
~ '26.95
~ '29.95
IT\

5
5

SHIRTS ................
SHIRTS ................
SHIRTS ................
SHIRTS ....... .........

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

January Clearance

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BOYS'

WINTER JACKETS
Size 8 thru 18 in a good variety of warm comfort- •
'able styles and colors. Many hooded stylas.
:o

16.71 !I 24.95 JACKETS ..... .... ......
'18.41 1 '29.95 JACKETS ..... ........ ..
'19.91 I '39.95 JACKETS ...............
'22.11 I s49.95 JACKETS ...............
5

5

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

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'18.71 :0
J:l
'22.21 &lt;
'29.91 p
*37.41 ~

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DRESS
CLEARANCE

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~ REG. '31.00 .. SAL.E '21.70

:ii

REG .'39.00 .. SALE"27.30

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MEN'S

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WINTER
JACKETS
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JUNIOR
SPORTSWEAR.

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CAROUSEl AND CATNIP PANTS,

1'39 .95JA~ETS .... .... ' 29.91l
I '59.95 JACKETS ........ *44.91 I

- _._..._...,_.._.._.._.._._..,__.._.,_.._.._...._.'-'----------..-.-..-..-..--l

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.: Januarv Clearance

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cHILDREN's . .

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I COATS &amp; ! DRESS SALE ~
~ KNIT SHIRTS I SNOWSUITS l1 CASUAl AND DRESSY STYLES :o~
:; Sizes Small thru Extra large IWINTER· ANDJACIETS,
,
COATS l
SNOWSUITS
REG: S9 .00 TO S41.00
MEN'S

1"'1

L~NG

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SIZES NB to 24 MOS .
2 TO 4, 4 TO 5X, 7 TO 14

Pick your favorites from this fine

r.
selection and save now.
fT\
•

Reg . ' 15.95 sHIRTs ...
J:; REG. ' 18 .95 SHIRTS ..
~ REG . '24 .95 SHIRTS ..
~ REG. '29 .95 SHIRTS ..

I

Clearance Sale

Reg.• 20 .0 o ......... Sale'15 .oo
' 11 .79 Reg. •28 .oo ......... sale 1 21.oo
'13.99 !Reg. '36.00 ......... Sale "27 .00
*18.41
Reg. '44.00 ......... Sale '33.00
•22.11
Reg. '60.00 .... , .. .. Sale '45 .00

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Clearanca
$630 $2 8 70
TO

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OPEN FRIDAY
'TIL 8:00 p.M.

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e·LB.-ERF.ELDS.
POMEROY

992-3671

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ElhiPfaldt
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~CLEARANCE • JANUARY CLEARANCE • JANUARY CLEARANCE • JANUARY CLEARANCE • JANUARY CLEARANCE
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AGREEMENT SIGNED - West Virginia Con-ectlons Commfs..
stoner A.V. DodrUl slgnsa,:reement with Inmate representatives Alvin
Gregory, left, Wid Dann;y LehmWI who requested better llvmg

conditions at the institutlon afterward. Sb: hostages remained In the
irunate controled prison this momlng. UPI.

A prison spokesman sa id he did not believe the
second death would £&gt;fleet the agreement worked to
end the rebellion at tne prison. whe re convicts
complained they are "treated like dogs."
The agreement promises corrections officiaL~- not
(Xlllce- will oversee the reopening of the prison, that
inmates Danny Lehman and Alvin Greg01y will
handle media coverage and that the re wil l br no
'retaliation against convicts who pal1icipated In the
uprising.
"Nobody wanted this th ing," Lehman said . "We
tried to avoid it for a long time."
"We .just want to he treated like human beings."
Gregory said , adding Inmates had tried for years lo
seek prison lrnpmvemenls lawfully. -

ca ll to come to the gale to pick up two. One was d£&gt;ad,
one was alive."
The body of 38-year·old Kent Slle, who was sr.rving
a li fe sentence for murder and kidnap, was released
early Thursday. HE' died of slash wounds durh·1g the
uprising in whlch 17 hostages were seized when about
200 convicts look control of the 740-lrunate prbon at
5:30p.m. WednPSday.
Before convicts and correct Ions offic ials slg ned a
agreement Thursday to end the bloody seige, lour
hoslages had been released .
Thursday evening, six more hostages- all guards
-were released and thcconvlcts promlsed tofr eethe
seven remaining hostages before a meeting today
with Moore.

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board reorganizes;
approves temporary budget

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consider the settlement as early as
next week. He predicted It wlll be
approved .
"Coupled with last spring's com·
prehenslve federal gas cost reduc·
tfon for Columbia, today's settle·
ment illstrates how our aggressive
consumer advocacy has benefitted
Columbia customers at all three
levels of government regulation,"
said Spratley.
"This agreement also demonstrates a refreshing willingness by
Columbia to hold down residential
gas bills."
"This settlement reflects Colum·
bla's confidence that we will he able
to continue and to expand our
efforts to control all costs to the
benefit of our customers, " said
Columbia in a statement.
"We feel this set !Iemen! Is very
significant to us and our customers
in that It will enable us to focus on
our primary objective- to provide
our customers the very best service
at the most reasonable cost rather than becoming continually
hogged down In costly. time·
consuming lltlgallon."
!Continued on page 101

agreed that monev would have to he taken from th£&gt;
bituminous accounl.
"Everylhing else has been cut -to the bare
minimum," said Spencer.
The commission is scheduled to approve the
highway department budget, along with all other
count y budgets, at Wednesday's regular meeting.
At the request of Lee Wedemeyer, superintendent
of Carleton Schooi·Melgs Industries. the commission
approved the payro ll portions of the proposed 1986
budget for Carleton Schooi·Meigs Industries.
All other portions of that budget were tabled until
Wednesday.
·
Present for yesterday's meettngwereComm lssioners Manning Roush , Rich Jones and David Koblentz,
Mary Hobstetter, clerk, and Martha Chambers,

-----··--------------------....;as;;,SIS;;;.

summer youth wo.,;rk..:p;.ro,;;gr:..;.
am
;.._.

MOUNDSVILLE . W.Va. iUPI - Convict s who
took contml of West Virginia 's Peniten tiary in a New
Year's day t1ol that claimed the lives of two inmates
agreed to r£&gt;1ease their seven remai ning hostages
toda~· before meeting with Gov. Arch Moore to air
complaints abou t the J2().year ·old prison.
Hours aft£&gt;r reaching an agreement Thursday to
release the \3 hostages still being held in the
fol11l'SS·like prison. IhE' body of a second iruna le was
taken to the gale. a long \\it h another convict sufferin g
an asthma attack.
The ~econd dead inmate. who died of stab 1\Uunds,
was idcnlifird as 3l ·yca r·old kidnapper Harold ))('an .
There was no indication when he dird .
"II could have been anytime during the distur·
bance." sai d pr L,on official John Massie. "We got a

I JACKETS, SKIRTS AND CROP PANTS r.
1Good st'(le selectton. Stzes Small
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1thru XL, plus big size. Suede and I
Jl
!leather jackf}tS included.
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REG.'16.00 ..... . SALE'11 .20
REG. '19.00 ...... SALE "13.30
:D REG ' 52 00
SALE '36.40 !'89.95 JACKETS ........ '67.41~ REG. *22.00 ..... SALE $15 .40
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'129.95 JACKETS ...... '97.41 REG. '25.00 ...... SALE ' 17 .50

~ REG. •46.00 .. SALE '32.20

Commissioner Rich Jones said he would like to see
the department continue the summer program, even
if on a minor scale. Roberts said he too Is hoping to
continue the program but that lt . would depend on
"unanticipated revenue," such as , if the department
does not have to pay out a lot of overtime this winter.
" If everything runs smooth," said Spencer, "then
the budget will run smooth."
Wartlf'r called the revised budget proposal
"workable."
"We will just try to live within our budget and
maintain the serv1ces we've been providing." said
Roberts.
When asked by Ute commission where the
department would make cuts if the budget does run
short ·ln some areas, Roberts, Warner and Spencer

Agreement ends crisis at West Virginia Pen

\January
Clearance!
1 January Clearance ~
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JUNioR, Mlsn
HALF SIZES

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explaiped Roberts.
All monies alloted the highway department comes
from the state treasurer's office in the fonncl Jmonles
from those taxes. Each year the state dispur ses the
monies throughout the!l8countlesbasedona!;.peclflc
formula. In the past few years, the state was 1!laying
catchup and dis!Jibutlng money that was due the
county from past years . This year thE' county is
"caught up" Roberts said.
To eliminate the need for layoffs at the department.
cuts havebeenmadelnseveralareas lncludlng:afund
for the purchase of a tandem truck an,d the
bituminous products account.
The department will still purchase a truck ~. 'a mer
sald , but not a tandem.
Also cut from the budget was the departrnent's

Settlement reduces
Columbia gas bills

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TABLE COVERS
TOWELS
NOVELTIES

1 Section. 1 0 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . NewfPaper

Layoffs avoided by budget revtston

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LADIES'

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HOLIDAY

en t i n e

Pomeroy-Middleport. Oh io, Friday, J anuary 3 , 1986
~~~~----~------------~--~~~~~

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lI $900
Clearance
$3375 I

f"'lllllo.oool

copyrighted 1985

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II Regular and extra large sizes. Broad - :0
I cloths, flannels, corduroys. regular z
and button down collar styles.
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MISSY and EXTRA SIZES
REG. SJ2.00 TO S4S.OO

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Vol.35, No.1B1

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REG. S43.00 TO 5118.00

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Christine Marie Arnold, infant
daughter of Jeff and Debbie Scott
Arnold, and Jessica Na dine Jordan ,
small daughter of Walter and
Kathy Gilkey Jordan , were dedi·
ca led In special services at the
Temple United ~ethodlst ChUrch.
Offtclating at the rite of dedicallon
was the Rev. Arthur Crabtree.

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Child dedicated

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"My family, my self and all city
employees are deeply grieved at

Feeling of fear

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CLEVELAND (UPII - A firefighter who died fighting a warehouse blaze this week mav have
gotten lost and ran out of air.
Battalion I Fire Chief Paul Wolke
said the flaming warehouse was a
maze of aisles and shelves a nd that .
firefighter Daniel Pescatrice may
have gotten lost.
"The warehouse was a maze of
aisles and shelves." Wolke said.
"Pescatrice kept In radio contact as
as long as he could. He told
firefighters he was in one location.
but they follt)d hlm in another."
Pescatrice, 35, Westlake, died of·
smoltl&gt; Inhalation, the first Clevp.
land Fire Department cllicial to die
In the line of duty since Dec. 7, 1974.

~

STARTS FRIDAY, JANUARY 3rd

Peace in 1986

•

A tem(Xlrary appropriation tota l·
ing $\,9!14,1i6H was adopted dUJing
Thursday night 's organi7.a lional
meeting of the Meigs Loca l Board
of Education . Tt·rasu1'1?r .Jane Pl)·
will bring figu res for the pc rmanrnl
appropriation to the February
meeting. Fty was aut horized to
secu Jt' advanc&lt;' draws from the
&lt;'Ounly au ditor Bil l Wickli ne whl'n
fund s u1·e avuilabl£&gt;.
\'rteran board member, Robert
Snowdt'n, was rlecrt-d plt's idrn l.

l](ofoll' the opening of the meet ·
lng, Robert Barton, reeiC&lt;'ted to the
board last fall , and Larl)' .R~pe. a
new mrmlx•r ri!'Cted In the fall ,
wrrr givm llll'i r oath&gt; of office by
Fl,.. Rarton was named vice
p 1~s ident for \986.'
M&lt;'CIInK dales,.,,
Rc~'l.lla r m('('llngs were sci lor 7
p.m. on tllc third Tuesday of each
mont.h ,with four deviations from

' l hat dati' already nolrd lor the year.
The first ohangewlll be the Januaty
meeting which will he held on Jan .
16 rather than on the regular

di'Stgnated date.
A service fund of $500 lor the year
was established for hoard members
and bonds were purchased lor the
board president, treasurer, superin tm&lt;k'nt and assistant suw rin·
tendent. They are $;IJ,!XXJ each.
Liability insurance for board
members, ad min istrators and cer·
lifted 8J1d non-certified pE'rsonnel
was purchaSf'd rrom the Nation·
wide Insurance Co. The tnsuran().&gt;
is $1 million pet· Incident .
Dan Morris, superinten dent, was
named the agen t to apply, receive,
expend and aec&lt;iunt for federal
fund s. Membership In the Ohio
School Boards Assn. was renewed.
Hospltallzailon Insurance was
changed to the new Community
Mutual insurance Co. which will
Include Blue Cross and Blue Shield
benefits. Supt. Morris submllted a
1984·85 progress report. At the
suggestion of Barton; il was agreed
with the superintendent will pre·
pare a newslett er for pu blication on

.

A state judge in 19&amp;3 gave the Departm ent of
Co!TI'Ctions five years 10 conec t unconstltional 13
prison condi tions that included Insufficient living
space. residenc£&gt; and dining areas investrd with
rodents and vermin. food that did oot fl1('&lt;&gt;1 minimum
nutrit ional needs. inadeq uate outdoor exercise
facilities, aud "grossly deficient medica l. dental and
psychiatric care offered b~· insufficient and unquali·
fird per'l:lnel in an inadequate and unhealthy medical
facilit y."
About «Xltnmates were hol&lt;&gt;d up Thursday in the
south wing 9! the prison where the hostages were
being held. but officials estimated only 200 of them
took part in the uprising !hal began in the prison
dining ha ll.

•
mlnes
New GM chosen for Meigs
ALBANY - Jame F. Tompkins
has been named general manager
of Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs Division .
'
Tompkins . a native of Svdnrv.
Nova Scotia . Canada. has been
_ general manager Qf Sout hern Ohio
Coal' s Manlnka DivisiOn at Fair
mont , W.Va .. since \981.
Tompkins joined Southern Ohio
Coal's Martinka No. 1 mine In 1977
as assistant mine superintendent
He was named mine superintend·
ent In 1979. then was promotrd to
general mine superintendent in
11981. The name cY: the posit ion was
rh angrd to gPneral manager In
1983.
Prior to join in g lhe Mart ink a
operations, Tompkin s servrd as
assistant min£&gt; foreman for U.S.
Steel Corporation's coal mining

a regular ba sis.
Rupe, the ne•&lt; board metcnber,
brought up four points which' •1ll he
up for discussion and po :sslble
aetion at the F ebruary me•eling.
Those Include: 1001'1' easy &lt;tCCl'SS
lor clllzens of the districl'lo gel on
the board meeting agendas; e •xecu·
tlv£&gt; sessions to he held at the •:&gt;nd of
the regular meetings Instea d 01
lie!Dre the llll'l?tlngs en&lt;!; an
employees lncen tlve progra :m to
reward recognition of employees
petionnlng especially well , t md a
more comprehensive rea ding
program.

.,.

opera tions from \~70 ro \9i7.
Torr. pklns holds a minin g engl.
nee ring del(l'('(' fro m the Techn ica l
Univ{\rsity of No\'.:1 Scoti a, Halifax,

No,·a Scotia , Ca nada. He and his
wife. Rona lda . and their two
children : G!ooffn'V and Jenn ifer
wiU he reloeating from their hom~
in Fairmont to sourhrastf'rn Ohio.
Southern Ohio Coa l Is a wholl y
owned subsldl arv of Ohio Power
Company, onr of right opera ting
electric util itii'!' compHslng the
American Elrctt·ic Power System.
Coal from 1he three Meigs
Division mini'!' - Meigs No. \ and
Meigs Nn . 2 in Meil(s County and
Raccoon N9. 'In \'in ion County- is
used at Ohio Po11·er's G•meral
James M. Ga\'in IX)wer plant In

Cheshire.

Arkamas trucker injured in accident

The board movrd Into executive
session one hour to discus:;; the
salary of Treasurer Fty after w hich
Nme It was agt'l'(&lt;d - with Barton
c~tsttng ' a dissenting vote -- to
inr1'1?ase her salary by seven
percent annually. Plans were also
made for the board to meeting with
pr·tnclpals and adminlstraton; in
the tlf'ar tuture: .

JAME\1 F. TOMPKINS
'~

An Arkansas man Is -.listed In
satisfactory condition at Veterans
Memorial Hospital for Injuries
suffered after the tractor·Irailer he
was Operating overturned on Ohio
124 Thursday morning.
Harold L. Davis, 25, of Rogers,
Ark .. was admitted for observation
after suffering multiple scrapes
and bruises, hospital officials said.

The Gallla·Ml'igs post of the Stare
Highway Palmi said Davis was
eastbound on 124. about one-tenth of
a mile east d Salem Twp. 333, when
his rig reportedly went off the right
side of the road and overturned.
Davis' fig sustained heavy dam.
age In !hE' 10:08 a.m. accident. He
was cited by the patrol for failure to
control.
: l

�Commentary
lll Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVO:J'ED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON /\REi\

~lb

.

cs: m~ '"'"'--'._-.-.....,.., =,=
~v

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PA.T WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DA.LE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
\.

arr v•elro me . Th(•y should be&gt; lf'Ss than 300 words
lon2 . Alllt&gt;llt'rs are subjt'et to editing and mus1 bf signed wi t h namt&gt; . addrrss and
te le phone numb&lt;-1·. ~o u ns!gnrd lf'lll'rs wilt be publlshi'd . Lf'llf'r~ should hf&gt; In
~ood taslE' . add rr ssin,e iSSUf'S . not ~rso n a!ifif's

LETIE;RS OF

OP!r-.:10~

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, January 3, 1986

I

O'er' the ramparts ____· _

The Daily Sentinel,

'Year of peace'
Although the format of their New Year's greetings 'was not hing like a
dfbate. President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachl'v Identified
their main area of disagreement -weapons in spare. using many of the
. same wonls and Ideas to hope for a peacefu I 1986.
Both referred to their November 1985 summit, the llrst meeting between
leaders of the two countries in six yea rs. with Reagan hoping to build "on
the foundations laid in Geneva."
Gorbachev said the Geneva summit showed that. while "The gap
djvldlng us is still wide ... bridging that gap would be a great feat- a feat
our people are ready to perform for the sake or world peace ...
The Soviet leader. who str&lt;J&lt;M&gt; to his desk In the Kremlin. put on hi s
glasses and began reading, said 1986 "has been declared the year of
peace."
· "Let's work together to make II a year of P.,ace,'' said RE'agan, sitting
behind a desk flanked with the American and presidential Oags, and a
sldeboanlln the background dlsptaylngfamily pictures. Reagan had taped
his five- minute address at the Century Plaza Hotel in Los Angeles on
Saturday.
While both dw!'lled on making it a safer world. Reagan made a pitch for
his space defense program as a wq y "toone day free us from the thrPat of
nuclear destruction."
Gorbachev opposed Reagan 's "Star Wars " program. sa)•lng. " It is
senseless to seek greater secutity for one's self through new types of
weapons."
Reagan used some Russian words, "rhlistoye nyebo" trlear skies ! and
"spasiba" tthank you !.
Gorbachev referred to "a remarkable work of American literature. the
novel 'The Winter of Our Discontent .... &gt;&lt;Titt&lt;'l1 b) ' John Steinbeck.
In one particu~rly Interesting parallel. both men established the)· were
speaking lor their peopiP.
Reagan said he spoke to Gorbachev in Genpva "as tix' eii'Ctec
representative of the Am&lt;'fican people."
GorbachO\· said during the summit "we had the mandatP of our
peoples."
.
Reagan. in a long-awaited chanCi' to explain the benefits of political
freedom to th&lt;' Soviet audience. declarer . "Our democratic system Is
founded on the belie! In the sanctity of human Ufe."
Gorbachev said. "The Sovipt people are dedicated lo peace - that
supreme value equal to the f(ih of life."
Reagan 's "sanctity of human life" was in the mntext of human lights.
Gorbachev's reference to "the f(ift of life" was in the mntext of the need to
prevmt another war.
The Soviets, he reminded AmNican li st!'rwrs, suffered " unheaU n~
wounds and the agony of irretrie,·able losS&lt;'s" in World War II, fighting as
allies with the Cnited States.
GorbachO\' noted the peaceful intention.&lt; of th&lt;' American people he had
lea rned from \'isil ing members of CQng.rss. scientists. businessmen and
sta tPSmC"n .

We read a great ·tleal about the
troubled world ~e Uve In, and we
shou ld read more about It as we
con temp,late 1986 and ttl' challengl"
ahead In this centul)'. Organized
communism Is of course the
principal agent of human evil, but
there Is a great deal of this that
springs, so to speak, frol)'l ttl' vel)'
soul of man. and it is ewe!)' whereIn Central Park: In the South Bronx.
and In West Hollywood, and around
ttl' corner, true; but In Amt&gt;rica Its
force Is not organized, and this Is a
critical difference.
Doing some light reading over the
Christmas holidays, I learned more
about CoL ldi Amln than I had
known, from ttl' hugl"ly rewarding
"Modem· Times" of Paul Johnson,
the British historian. And reflection
on Amin Is by m means out of
order. Inasmuch as he Is alive and
well, looked alter by the sheiks of
Araby In Jedda.
Llst&lt;'l1 to this: ldl Amln became a

Berry's World

Muslim. when he was 16. He hired
out as a Ugandan mercenal)' to
fight cattle rustlers In Kenya. " It
was du ;covered," writes Johnson ,
"he had murdered Pokot tribe~men
and left them to be eaten by hyenas,
got lnfoeormatlon from Karamajog
tribesn'l&lt;en by threatening to cut off
their pemlses with a panga, and had
actually sliced off the genlials of
eight •&gt;f them to obtain confessions." AU of this and much more
the British knew, but were reluctant teo prosecute on tbe eve or
Independence lor Uganda , so they
referre•l the case to Obote. "Obote
oettled for a 'severe reprimand,' a
curlou s punishment for massmurder ."
Sometime later. Khadafy egged
Arnln Qn to ousting Obote, because
he had .a few Israeli advisers about.
Arnln t hen began massacre on a
he-manl scale. "Amln often participated 111 atrocities, oometlmes of a
plivatt' nnture. Kyemba 's wife

WASHINGTON - Is Smokey
the &amp;ar hiding a transmitter In
his hat and using that famous
shov £&gt;1 for an antpnna?

Could be .
Incredible as it s!'&lt;'ms, hikers,
campers. climbers. an glers, hunters and other Ametica ns who like
to g&lt;&gt;t awa\· from It all in govern·
ment parks. fot'Psts and wilderness
Jll'as may not be grtting awa)' at
all. No matter how remote the site.
thev rna.\· be well wlthin'rangr offe
e mpJo~· res

usin g sophisti·

ra ted survelllance systems.
In fact , according to a recent con gressional study. some of ttl' unli ·
keliest feder~l agencies arc &lt;'111hu ·
siastlr users of super-snooper de ,·ic&lt;•s. ·me Nat ional Park &amp;&gt;r&gt;·ice.
Nat ional Forest Srrvice, 0\'en the
Fish and Wildlife &amp;'!'\'ice. all make
rxtrnsi\·r U.S(\ of l'\('('tronir -survei\ lanC'l' ll,· holog-i('S.

The so lllude you sw k cou ld lx'
s h ~::~rrd by rangers many mi les
awa)· wllhout )'our knowledge .
Thl' eongrrssional Office of

comments. As chaltman of the
OAU, he addressed the General
Assembly of the United Nations-In
1975 in a rabid sprech in which't\e
denounced "Zionist-U.S. conspi·
racy" and called not only for the
exJI!lslon of Israel but for Its
extinction (i.e., genocide). "The
Assembly gave him a standing
ovation when he arrived, ap·
plauded him throughout, and again
rose to Its feet when he left. The
following day, tt\e U.N. Secreta!)'·
General and the President of the
General Assembly gave a public
dinner In Amln's honor." Historian Johnson summarizes:
"Arnln was not just a case of
reversion to African primitivism.
In oome respects hts regime was &lt;(
characteristic renectton of the
1970s. Ins terror was a Muslim·
Arab phenomenon; his regime was
in many ways a foreign one, run by
Nubians, Palestinians and
Libyans."
George Shultz made a dramatic
gi"Sture when In Yugoslavia he
banged h!s fist down on the desk of
the foreign minister and cut short .
the explanation of the hijacking and
killing on the Achtlle Lauro as a
mere expression of Palestinian
earnestness In the search for a
homeland. The terrorist let go by
the presldl'nt of l!aly, given hospl·
tatlty In Yugoslavia, protected now
in Iraq. Is ooe more test lmony to the
willingness of world leaders, even
leaders of relatively civilized
states, to handll' mattl'r-of·factty
men who deserve execution. They
deserve that not merely because
moral poet I)' Is served by punishing
them. It Is, rather, a need lor an
assertio n of will against outlaW!)'
by states that II)' to govern
themselves by the rules of law.
You cannot at one and the sa~
tlm!'.generate a heated and JI!rposlve disgust with !dl Amln and also
give him state dinners In New York,
and protect him l'rom mosquito
bites In Saudi Ar,b!a. Diplomacy
can be the great Innovator of moral
rea lism.

the gizmos were used for build·
in g security and law en force ·
ment functio ns. But he added
ca ndid ly: " I can't Imagine an
appllcationf or some of these."
- The Fish and Wildlife Ser·
vice. with more than 90 million
acres to oversee. including wild·
life refuges . fish hatcheries and
research arE'as. usrs or pla ns 10
use nlnr SurvPIII a nC'f' sys tems ,
and will probably add six more to
- tho~ • f' lx'nign folks who run the its obsPrvation arsrnal. The onrs
guidrd tours. answer our kids· alrea dy In use include sa tellit es,
questi• Jns and keep tix' traffic telephone taps. miniature trans·
mavi n g - use nine different eiPt' · mitter&gt; and vehicle -tracking de tronlc -surveillance technologies vices . Offlr!als also want to use
to keep trac k of who does what on "pen registers," which monitor
the 79 mill!on anrs under it s ro n- numbNs ca ll ed from 1argeted tr·
trol. acco rding to the OTA re· lep hones, and voice-recognition
port. TIIP d!'\'icos in r luded: radio apparatus. i" He!!o, that vou.
srannt• t'"s. min ia turC' transmit! · Bambi''" !
r rs. n ight -visio n S)'Stems . vehl ·
- ThC' Forrst S(lrvire favors
rio tr 11ckers. satellites and hid · l'ight snooping S)'s tems for it s 229
drn Sl ! nsors .
million acrrs. Including mail In
An "'ff icial of the Range rs Act i· trrcept io n. telephone taps and
vii iPs Bri:inrh told our associa fr closed -rirrutl te levision . Most
Donald Goldberg that manv of

are usl?d for law enforcement ,
the service told co ngressional In·
vestigators. In addition, sensors
are used to monitor forest land
where "costs of physical protection
are ex('('ssive."

-The Natinal Oceanic and At·
mospher!c Administration uses
six different elec tronic surveil lance tPchnologles, Including the
dial-reading pen registers, body
wires and telephone taps .
- The Agriculture Department
has other sub-agencies besides the
Forest Service that use electronic
surveillance systems. Its lnspec·
tor genera l uses nine ,technologies,
Including satellite Interception,
mall monitoring and the ever·po·
pular telephone taps. The Agrlcul·
turr Stabilization and Conserva·
lion Service, "I n su pport or ongo·
lng criminal investigations," uses
nine techniques. Including satellite
interception. electro nic mall monitors, pen registers and closed·
circuit TV .

Looking ba~l~k ________W_il_lin_m_A_._Rus_h~er
~ ,, ,
•

... .• t •• , , •

" Lrke everybody else. when it comes ro Star
Wars . I KNOW ir won ·r work . but I need to
BELIEVE If will ..

,,,

:Today in history
Toda)' is Friday .. ian :\, thl' third d &lt;i)' of l!lf/6. wit h :162 to foll ow.
The" moon is in lts 1st quotrll-'r.
Thz morning St~rs till' MercUiy , Vl'nu s. Mars and S~ttum.

"'

Tllf' rvrning star is .Jupitrr.
TlloSl' bol11 on this da te an• under ill(' sign of Caprirom . They include
·British Prime Minister Cl"nwnl All !o&lt;• in 18&amp;!; .J .R.R. 'roikt•in. author of
i·J.ord of thl&gt; Rings," in 1892; actor Ray Mllland in 19tr7tage7'll ; Maxlnl'
Andrews of th&lt;' Andrews Sist"rs trio in 191R tage 6K1 ; en!Prtatncr VIctor
Borge in l!l(J.l tage Til. and a ctrl~s \ 'ictorla Principal In 1945 1age 411 .
On thl~ date in hiS! Of) :
In 1m. till' C'ontlncntal Army commanded by George Washington
dPfea ted the British at Prlnct•lon, N.J .
.
· InN~. the first March of Dimes campaigan tof!ght poUowasorganlzed.
: In 1959. Alaska became lhP 49th state of t))e Union.
: In 1961, the Un!led States severed diplomatic relations w!lh Cuba aftpr
Fidel ca·s tro announced that he was a communist .
. In 1967, Jack Ruby. whq_ shot and killed presidential assassin Lee Harvey
Oswald, died of cancer in Dallas.
In 1974, the Beatles reconled their last song together, "I Me Mine."
A thought tor the day: Clement An lee, Britain's post - war Labor Party
prime minister, said, "Democracy means government by discussion, but
It Is only effective If you can stop people talklng."
~

~

federal budget deficit. and noting how,
as the budget was being drawn up,
they were now commiserating with
every interest grou p in sight on the
cruelly of Mr. Reagan's proposed cuts.

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
University of Oklahoma, fulfllllng
Its role as preseason favorite, was
named college football's national
champion ;Thursday by the UP!
Board of Coaches.
It marked the fifth tbne since the
UP! ratings were started In 1950
that Oklahoma has been crowned
national champion. The Sooners
previOusly won In 1950, 1955, 1956
and 1915. Only Southern California,
whlch also has five national titles,
has won as many titles.
The 11-1 Sooners, rated No. 1 In
the preseason, were ranked No. 2
before they ripped previously top.ranked and unbeaten Penn State
25-10 In Wednesday's Orange Bowl.
Oklahoma was the only New
Year's Day victor among the
nation's top four ratecf teams, as
1owa and Miami (Fla.), the leading
challengers, were soundly defeated
In their bowl games.
Big Ten champion Iowa entered
the Rose Bowl ranked No. 3 but was
downed by UCLA 4:i-28. Miami
(Fla.), whlch was ranked No.4, was
drubbed by Tennessee J5.7 In the

a

lack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta

TI'Chnology Assessment did a
study of fe4era l agencies t)lat
have ·~· lectrolllc -survel ll an ce systems a nd found that their use has
begun toencroachoncltlzens'pri·
vacy. Rep. Robert Kastenmeler .
D-Wls.. . wants to bring legal protectior,s int o th&lt;' high-tech age.
Some of what the congressional
in\'esrl.gators told him was pu z·
zlin g. Fnr example:
- T ho Natio nal Park SPrvicP

At the end of the year. some of my hasn 't oeven changed his mind about
braver colleagues in the column bu s•· Taiwan "
ness ha.ve be;en known tO.review their
On c•me part icular issue. the presi·
work product for the year past and dent's I'Onserva tive critics may wish
proclaim frankly those instances in to argll1c ~ that t1me has proved me mis·
which they went wrong: made a mis· taken. 1n July. defending Mr. Reagan
taken forecast or whatever.
agai nsl. charges that he had "done
Curious as to my own score. I re· nothi nl( ' regarding the hijack of TWA
cently went back ' over my 1985 col- flight fl47 . 1 argued lor patience:
umns and made an Interesting discov·
··To criticize Mr. Reagan at this
ery By and large I was very careful point i'; like trying to review a play at
about trying to predict the future In the encl or the first act. The story is pafa ct. I round only one big. fat . confi· tently 11ot over The whole retaliation
dent prediction, in a mid-January col- scenari o remains to be played out umn on President Reagan's second and it may well be delayed substanterm then just "-'ginning. Dismissing tially by the need to weigh the fate of
all the~peculation that he would be a those remaining seven hostages in the
"new Reagan." reversing himself on a Bekaa, Valley. If no retaliation ensues,
tax . mcrease_ an~ preoccupied with that wntl indeed be the tjme. and the
achtevmg hiS place '" history" occaston. for condemnahon But 11 ts
through an accord with the Soviet • scarc•·lly here yet."
Union, I placed my bets in a way that.
.
Now . SIX mont~s have passed, ~nd
[ must say, reads rather well a year
tater·
where ts the retaltahon? Settmg astde
"What you saw in his first adminis· the ,suggestive sch~me , for "disrupttration is. to a remarkably large ex· tng .'h e Qaddaf! regtme s terromt optent, what you'll get in his second . The eratto~s that was blown by a leak to
man still thinks the federal govern· The 1\, ~shmgton Post m early Novemment is much too big. and will try his ber, I call you~ attenhon to the little.
. not1ceoJ sealed tndtctments or the TWA
best to ~httlle It down, or at least di· 8f7 tel'forists that the Justice Depart-'
mtntsh tiS growth rate. He st1U th~nks ment obtained . from a federal grand
tax rate~ are too h1_gh , and Wt!l hght jury just before the end of the year.
hke a. wtldcat to bnng Ute deftc.lt un· This obscure little step suggests that a
der control by . cuttmg expendttures tegal tr(lundation lB being laid for possir~ther t~an ra!smg ta.xes., He still con- ble fu:ture action. On the question of
Siders the Soviet Umon the r'!Cus or retalt.utlon therefore the jury is still
ev1im the modern world,' and mtends out
'
'
to resis! its various aggressll\ns, direct
·
and otherwise, by appropriate means.
My review of my 1985 columns did
He wnt keep right on building up the produce ~e notable unexpected benation's defenses, very definitely in· nus: .rny mdlsputably favorite seneluding research on a satellite defense tence. It turned up In a March column
1against ICBMs. At the same· time, he about the Democrats and the deficit
will actively ~k reductions In all ex- Recal lhng how the Democrats had
istlng al'lll!, provided tftey are equal, made the raften ring during Ute 1984
balanced and, above all, veririable. He cam~mgn, with their watls about the

SOOners ear·n No. -1
nod iri college football

__,W~il_lin_m_F_.B_u_ck_ley-=---Jr;

Teresa, matron-ln-chargl" of Mulago Hospltai, was pres&lt;'l1t when the
fragmented body of Amln's w1le
Kay was brought In: Arnln appears
oot only to have murdered but
dismembered her , for he kept
collections of plates from anatornl·
cal manuals. He Is also said to have
1\llled h!s son and eaten his heart, as
advised by a witch-doctor he flew in
from Stanleyvltle. There can be
little doUbt he was a ritual cannibal,
keeping selected organs in his
refrigerator."
Now, well after most of this was
known to all political Insiders In
Africa, the Organization of African
Unity elected him as. their pres!·
dent , and all chiefs of state, with
three exceptions, attended the
summit conference held In Kam·
pala. ~'The heads of state showered
Arnln with congratulations during
the summit when. having consumed parts of his earlier wife, he
married a new one," Johnson

Bugging .tht~~ outdoors

deral

The Daily

Ohio

I concl uded: "The only dericit the

Democratic Party realty gives a hoot
about is the one that showed up in their
vote totals on Nov. 6."
That says 1t all

Berry's World

" This phony degree fr.om the diploma mill is

can say that our only loss of the
season was to the nallona l
champion."
'·
The most dramallc climbs in the
final ratings were made by Tennessee, UCLA and Texas A&amp;M.
Tennessee, 9-1-2, moved up four
places to No.4 after its thrashing of
Miami; UCLA, !l-2-I, jumped seven
placPs to No. 6 following its
humbling of Iowa, andTexasA&amp;M,
10·2, advanced lour places to No. 7
after whipping Aubum 36-16 in the
Cotton BowL
Air Force, 12-1, also advanced,
moving up two pl aces to No. 5
following a 24-16 t liumph over
Texas in the Bluebonnet Bowl.
Miami, Iowa and Nebraska all
fell off considerably in the final
ratings after their bowl setbacks.
Miami , 10-2, dropped four places to
No.8; Iowa . 10-2, fell six places to
No. 9, and Nebraska, 9-3. dropped
four places to No. 10.
Ohio State, 9-3, made the biggest
climb among the second 10, advanc·
ing from No. 17 to No. 11 following
its 10-7 triumph over Brigham
Young In the Florida Citru s Bowl:
The loss dropped BYU eight places
to No. 17.

Final standings

Scoreboard ...

1\"EW YORK 1UPJ I - Thl' Unltl'd PrPss

lntf'rnaTional lbutl ol Coaches Top :JI
COlle!~" footbalJ rnti!IJIS. with first-plat'('
vt1es &lt;lfld rl:'l1lrds In Jl':l"-"ll~. 101111

points tbasc-d on 15 points tor llr" plact'. 14
for lll'COnd. Pic .), and last M't'k's rilllkinJr.
1. Oklahom t«llllHl 6H 2

'\,
"b

2. Mktltgan tiD-1·11

NO. 1- COLLEGE TEAM - 'The UPI Board of
Cnaches Thursday named the University of
Oklahoma ooDege football's na&amp;nal champion for
the 1985 season. The Sooners won the hooor wHh a
sparldlng victory over previously unbealal Penn
S&amp;ale In the OranKe Bowl. It marked the ftflh time

since the UPI ratlnp were slaJ1ed In 1950 that
Oklahoma had been crowned na&amp;nal dlamp.
Mlchlpn ftnWied serond while Ohio S&amp;ale came In
lith. UPI. The Sooners quarierback JameDe
Holleway Is sacked by Penn S&amp;ale's Shane Co..an
during lhe) )ranll' Bowlin the photo above. UPI.

J. Penn Slalf' tll·H
4. Tt&gt;nrR.W'f' j!f-1 -:ll

VERO BEACH, Fla. iUPli Oeveland backfield duo Earnest
Byner and Ke"!n Mack each ran for
mar? than l.llXI yards this season,
and they flgull' a couple hundred
more Satunlay wlll keep Dan
Marino off the field and Miami off
the scoreboanl .
The Browns, the AFC's Central
Division Champions at~. face the
Dolphins, who notched 12-4 to
capture the AFC East, In a
divisional playoff at the Orang\'
Bowl.
Mack and Byner became the
third pair of NFL backs to each
break the 1,!IDyanl barrier.
Byner . a lOth round draft choice In
1981 from East Carolina , said
Oevetand's plan or attack Is not
only to stop Mar.lno, but to eat up
Ume by running the ball as much as
possible and keeping the ace
quarterback on the bench.
"We're going to take control of
the game and keep Marino and
them off thP field.·' Byner said after
practice Thursday al Dodgertown,
the grounds whet'P the Los Angeles
Dodgers train for the baseball

"We're going to keep moving the
sticks and control the game," the
23-year-old said as he puUed off his offense rtf the field that'll help us a
gear In the locker room. "That' s whole lot."
Dolphin linebacker Jay Brophy
going to be our best defense."
said
Mack and Byner get his
Miami's defense was ranked 23rd
attention
and respect.
in the NFI. against the run,
"They're
the best we've faced all
allowing backs to gain 2,256 yards
this year. But Browns Coach ~arty year," said Brophy, a teammate or
Schottenhe!mer said thellguresare Kosar al Miami and a native of
Akron, Ohio. "They block well, they
misleading.
"You can see (In game !llms1 run well, ·and they make a lot of
that teams do try running against . yards after they're hit.''
Mack gained ],]04 yards tills
them, but they end up passing," he
season
and Byner ran lor 1,002.
said . "Miami must be playing
Mack would not say how many
good."
Nelth&lt;'r Byner nor Mack is yards he thinks the duo wlll pile up
worried about th&lt;' Miami defense. Saturday, but a few teammates are
making predictions.
\
though.
·"The guys on theteamsaybothof
"! don't try to worl)' about any
particular person, any defense," us will go over 150 yards," Mack
Mack said . "I just tly to go out there said.
Schottenhebner said the Dol·
and play the best I can . It takes 11 to
phins' offense grinds out too many
beat 11."
Mack, a rookie out of Oemson points to allow opponents toconcen·
who was selected In the 1984 trate solely on a runltlng game.
supplemental draft, said he and
Byner should be able to move the
bat! against Miami.
·
Kyger Creek at Hannan Trace
North Gallla at Southwestern
Eastern at Oak Hill
Sou them aat Symmes Valley
Jackson at Ga llipolis
Marietta at Athens
Fairland at South Point
CHICAGO I UPJ I - The Chicago
"1b me, not only Is Mike Portsmouth at Ashland
Bears have had a long htstol)' S!ngletal)' the best defensive line- BarboursvUle at Point Pleasant
tlegun by George "Papa Bear" • backer ever,'' says Ryan, · the Southern at SY,mmes Valley
Halas of refusing .lo re- negotiate Bears' defensive coordinator. "But Chesapeake a I Rock Hill
contracts for any of their players.
to me, he's the MVP of the NFI.. Meigs at Wellston
. · That went lor superstars as well Hands down ."
Belpre at Alexander
as fringe playl'rs.
Nelsonville -York al Federal·
· But when linebacker Mike Single·
Hocking
tal)'
_ waSfl ~oldout at the start of tix'
Vinton County at Miller
The Daily Sentinel
' tflilnlng camp last summer.
Trimble at Warren Local
warning light went out.
Salunlay's
4 games:
\~SPSU~\Iild)
C
o could slick to Its guns and
Southern al Wahama
,\ Oh-hdor1 nl Mulllmf'dla, lnt·.
1&lt;'1 Singlet a I)' s!t out the season- or
Gallipolis at Waverly
Pub l l~hr&lt;l ('\"('1"\' a lf('rn oon. Monda\·
agree to h!s demands.
Athens at Gr~nfleld
th rnu~h F'rltb_,·. 111 Cnurl S1. PoThey agreed .
ntr ro~· . Ohio , b) th r Ohio V a ll &lt;'~' Puh·
Cincinnati Taft at Portsmouth
llshlnl! Com p,1n_,. Mulllm('dla. In c-,
The fourth-year pro won a
Southern at Wahama
Poft1('ru_\·. Ohln 4~7ti9 . Ph . ~:l - 21~ . Sf'"restructured" contract providing
l' Ond.&lt;'l:t"s pusla~f' paid ill Poml'r n~·.
Fairland al
Ohio.
new lncent lvcs, including winning
United Press Inter{latlonal' s NFC
Mf'mbrr: l jnlfrd Pr~ .~ lnl&lt;'rnatlona l.
Delens!vl' Playe1· of the Year
lnlaml D;ill\' PrP ~S A~!HX'h.tllon and the•
&lt;1t1 1o Nrw~ ri.tpl't" As.&lt;~odarlon . Nationa l
award, an honor hi' won In 1984 and
1\th'f'l"li!I \I'IJ! Rrprf'SrnttJtl \'l'. Branham
aga in this year.
N£'\npapl'l" !\;tiPs. 7.1~ Third lhPnUl' .
Nf'w York. Nrw \'ork HIOI7
Slngletal)' rf'CI'Ivl'!i n votes In
198ri voting whi le teammate Ri·
Pf'.S'I" MA~-, · EH: St•nd addrt'Ss f'ha ngf'!oo.
tn 11lr Oilll\' Sfonllnrl. Ill Cout1 St .
chard Dent finished second with ll
Pmr.-.rr&lt;v, Oh.lo 4!)i00 .
points. Lawwnce 'fay lor of the New
S' lB.'ifRIYI'ION Ht\Tffi
York Giant s was third with eight
By Carrlt&gt;r or Motcw Roulr
points. Wes Hopkins of PhlladPI·
Onf' Wflflk .
. .... Sl.lfl
Onr Month ..... .... .. .... .. . . .... ..$-tfltl
phla had six pointS while the Bears·
Onr Yf'a r ..
$57 :lfl
Oils Wilson,. Dan Hampton and
SINOt.E (' OJ-\"
Gar)· Fenclk, along with Leonanl
PRICE
Marshall of thl' Giants, had one
Da ll.~.
- pJtnr-rach .
~- ·
..... ~ --- Subsc-rlbC'rs no1 dl'l'lrlnJZ to pay ftlrru f.
rit•r mav n•mlr In acl\ · ~n l't' dll"l'&lt;'t to
,
"Awards arP nice. but believe
1lw Daih· St•nt lnpl on a:l . nor 11 mont h
me, our job Isn't finished until we
basis . &lt;:r'C'dtr wlll br jZlV&lt;'n mrrlrr NH' h
montl1 .
get Into theSu pi&gt;r Bowl and win It,"
said SlngletaJy, the anchor of the
No ~ubscrlptlons by m .11! j)(&gt;rmiltf•(f&gt;ln
towns whrrr ho mf' ra rrtrr srrvtet• is
· NFL's premier defense. "That:s
: tvallahlf'.
the honor we all want."
Mall S•hMt.•rlpt Jon111 ,
[n a sport where Ills &lt;it en hard to
I•We Ohio
distinguish outstanding defensive
tJ WOI'Its .................................. m .r.s
1ti Wl'l'lt o .................................. $19.12
achievements , Singletary stands
!11 \\'N'4c.!i ..... .. ..........
. .. S.".R.2ol
alone. . He calls the signals lor
.
OUhilde Ohio
1410 Jllfnn Bird.
defensive coach Buddy Ryan's
U Wl'l'lt• .................................. 115.611
20
Wl'l'lts
................................
l!U!ll
complex "46" defense and leads by
1-800-344 3331
~1 Wl'dts ............................. ..... ,'i!l ,lll
• eXMnPie.

Tonight's games:

Chicago's Singletary
wins defensive award

8

!'IJATIOS..U. MSKETBAU.. ,\.'iS()(".

F..Mn-n ('GI'If&gt;n'fK'I·
M" L Pt:t.

H. AIBba1h11 ~~-2- 1 1
15. Baylor ~~ 1
16.

2'l9 J

:m

li

19. Mllr)'land 19·31
ll 1
11. Loul!lano Sf119·2·11 17 111
Olhl'f! fl'l'f'lvlnl! \'OWS: AriZona. 1\rtzona

01\ll&gt;lon

Hou..ton

G~ LPlK'hman.

F.•nt
Sr&gt;iin Col.lf)·. 1-rr ...
Jotm Sht&gt;pperd. ~v
Sly Roomtlrid. SV .

Todd[)('(&gt;!, NG .. .
Todd Adams. Sou
Do!;Jirk, Sou ..
Rktl Gil morro. KC
F.d Co!Un.~. F.otst .-...

Fayt&gt;. OH

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Wa...tlln~'lon l l!i,

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&lt;llk'lllo.'O Ill . llrlmll 112

lol .~

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11.11

Hoostun 1:a1. Goi&lt;Fn Sial•• 1~~
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Frlilll,f•M GUI"M''I IAllllnf'R t}IT I
New ,Jf'nll.~ ut Ro.&lt;iton. 7:.11 p.m

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SVAC
Scoring

NHL results

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Mldw~ IMwWon

Statt•, t\rrr(l.·. Auburn. Colorado. Grorj[iil.
Oklahoma ~ tatr&gt; and Waslml(lon.

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9. ICM' a U0-2 1
10. N('b-aska 1S.l1
11. Ohkl Slalt" 19--JI
12. Arkansas 110-21
11. f10r1da Slat" t9Jl

Phlludt•lphi.J a1 Hou ~To n . nll!hT
AnTcmo 11T (ioldl'n ST,, h · mL:hl
].1111\l'l .11 ~l&lt;'l&lt;lml'fl ln . nJ).!hl

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6. Uq.A 19-2-11
JJ213
7. Tl':ut.• A.tM t 10-21 336 11

"If we can't run against them, It'll
be kind of difficult lor our team,"
said Mack, 23. "If we keep their

season.

1

~!W

LA . Cllppin &lt;It Indiana . niJ!hT
,\!lan!a a! ChK' il~'n . n.J~:hl
:-;,..,. Y11r·k aT Mil""lHJkt 'f' ni)!nl
L"lall at Dalliis. nil!hT

NBA results

~ ~

.m

J

Browns need strong running
attack to defeat Dolphins

01 •• •• •. • • • ••••••••

the big break I've been waiting for. ".

Sugar Bowl.
That left. Oklahoma as the
obvious champion. The Sooners
received 40 first -place votes and 614
points from the 41 coachi"S who
participated In the final balloting.
"I'm fortunate to coach at a
school that can ~nract the good
players that allow you the opportun·
tty to wln·.conference championships and national championships,'·
Oklahoma coach Bafl)' Switzer
said. "There are a lot of good
football coaches who don't ever
have that opportunity. There are
only a lew schools In the count!)'
thai ever have that opportunity."
Each week, the coaches vote lor
the top 15 teams, with 15 points
going to a coach's first- place
selection, 14 lor his second choice.
etc.
Michigan, 10-1·1, ~ved from 1\o.
5 to No. 2 after rallying past
Nebraska 2'7·23 in tl1e Fiesta Bowl
on New Year's Day. Penn State.
11-l, finished No. 3.
"It was a good season for us. we
just happened to lose to a great
team (W~esdayl night, and
we're glad that they finished No.I,"
a Penn State spokesman said. "We

));'olflHI

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!'lalu~· ·~

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Team offense

.....

G f1 Fl P'lti .ht·

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Noni!Galllil
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~~".2

LS 4 DR .............~.S619S

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992-217-4

..

�3, 1986

Friday.

In other games involvmg Top ~
teams . No.2 Michigan defeated ~o
15 Indiana H -69. No 5 Syracuse
overcame &amp;&gt;;ton College 68-52. No
8 St .John's toppped Providencr'
95-90 111 overtune. No. 9 LouLSiana
St rolled past Georgta &amp;'&gt;-73, No. 13
Nevada-Las \'egas edged Utah
State 100.9-4111 doubteovertune. No.
14 lllmols roiled past Mlntx'SOta
76-57 and No 16 Texas· El Paso
nipped Bngham Young 69-64 m
overtune
At Bloomington. ind. Gary
Grant scored 21 pomts. and Roy
Ta rpiE')' added ~ to lead Mtchigan
Mtchtgan, 13-0. contmue!l tt s best·
e'er start h} wmnmg tiS 16th
stratght conference game and 28th
coll.S(l('utiYE' regular-SN.son co ntest

Indiana. 8-3, lost its Big Ten home
cpener for the first time in seven
years.
At Syracuse, N.Y., Wendell
Alexis scored 13 of his game-- high 21
pomts m the second half to lead
Syracuse to a come from-behind
victory Syracuse ran Its overall
record to 9-0, and held the Eagles
without a field goal for 10: 23 of !he
second half
At Providence, R.I., Walter
Berry scored 35 points, including a
pair of free throws with one second
left in regulatiOn, to lead St John's,
13-l. Providence, 8-3, took the lead
with three ~nds left in the game
on BUiy Donovan 's 18-foot jumper
before Berr~v was fouled by
Donovan.
AI Ba ton Rouge, La.. Niklta
Wilson scored 19 points and
grabbed 12 rebounds to power
Louisiana State Anthony Wilson
added 18 points for the Tigprs. 13.0.
LSU is ctf to Its best start since 1922 .
when the team won its first 14
games.
At Las Vegas Nev . F'reddte
Ba nks scored ll points, mcludtng 3
jump shots in double overtune to
propel UNLV, 12·2. to a come-from behind 1octory over L'tah State 4-6.
Banks hll a lJ.foot 3- pomt Jumper to
Sl'!ld the game mto the second
overt une Armon Gilham added 22
pomts and PJUed down 22 rebounds
for the wmners Utah State's Greg
Grant led aU scorers wrt h li pomts
At Champaign . Ill . Tony Wysln
gpr scored 19 pomts, and Anthony
Welch 17 to lead No. 14llllnols, 10·2,
which extended it s home court wm
strea k to 31 games
At El Paso. Texa,, Dave Feitl hli
5 key free throws In regulation, and
Hemell Jackson scored all 4 of hiS
points m overtime to lift Texas-El
Paso UTEP unproved to 12·1 O\Pr
all . BY U dropped to 3-8

Bobcats, Redskins
post league wins
By United Press lntemational
When Northern lllmoiSieaves the
Mid·Amenca n Conference next
year. one opponent 11 will not miSs IS
Ohto Lmverslly
The Bobcats extended their
wmnmg stl'('ak over the Husk ies to
iif'ven stra1ght games w1th a ~

lictot)' Thursda~ mght at DeKalb.
Ill It was the Mtd·Arnencan
Conference season opener for both
r ~a m 5

(1

The las t lime N!U beat OL' was 111
thf' MAr post-sea son tourna ment m

19i\'2

EISI'where m Ohio college basket
ball act ton Thursda~ mght . Miamt
d&lt;'fea ted Bowling Gre('n . 62-).1 ,
Kent State toppl'd Toledo. '&gt;"&gt;-'•!.
and South Carolina beat Cmcmnatl .

• 63·56
Robert Tatum scored ~ pomt s.
rats tng hiS r a re('r total to 1.010. to
lead t h&lt;' Bobca ts to the11 eighth "111
tn 10 ga mes "'or them llhnots fell to
54

Da1 td .Jamrroon had 19 pomt s
and .John RhodPs added II lot· thP
Boix·ats
Ohm led 'II 2S a t halftime. but th&lt;'
Huskl!'s 1umped our at the start of
thP srcond ha IJ to forge a iZ 3'7
ad\a nrage with H II to pia~
'lllr lead)c hangrd hands thrr&lt;'
more tll11rs before Tatum htt a
22 footer to put the Bobcats a head
o-v.:\ 111th sex mt nu trs left \\tth a
b:l'l9 &lt;..~cl\ ant a gr . Oh1n sror'Pd sLx
strarght point s to take a ti8 59 lead
wtlh 26 S('(Onds left

game htgh 24 pomts to lead Mtamt
past Bowlmg Green 111 therr MA C
opener
Ron Hunter gave the Redsklns
thetr fi rst lead r:i. the game on the
last shot of the openmg period, a
layup that PJI Miamt ahead 25-24
w\t h

l : 12

rema\ntng

before

intr rmtsston
The hosts who 11&lt;'ver rra tled after
that. ou tscored the Falcons 11·2 to
open the second hall, takmg a li-26
advant age "llh 16·05 to go
F.nc I'ewsome scored 16 pomts m
hrlpmg the wumers up then· overall
record to 8-3 BG. whtrh fe ll to 1·8
for aUga mes. was paced b) Brian
Mtller's 'l2 pomts and Anlhonv
Robmson 's 10
At Kent Bill Toole' s game· htgh
19 pomts lifted Kent State to its
MAC openmg tnumph o1·rr Toledo.
Tr!T) 1\ earsch added 14 pomtsand
Ra~ Kubant conttibu ted 10 lot the
Golden Flash&lt;'&gt;
In a doS&lt;' ga me that sa" th&lt;'
Rockets on top 24-22 at haU rlme,
KSU took theleadfm goodwit hJ 28
rrmainmg when Toole sco red on a
Ia\ up Tht' Golden FlashPs hi t f11e
ht'!' thro"' d0"-11 the stretch to tee
thP "m
Mark German and Bob Bar
cherdt each scored 14 pomts for the .
Rockets . whtle Blake Burnham
tall red 1.1 point s of1 the bench
J\t Columbia S C.. Ten, Dozter
&lt;md Lmwood Mo\e scored 19 pomts
cdch to !Pad South Carolma to rt s
MPI m ConferPn('(' v1c tor) m ('r
Cmcmnalt

Ken n) Battle had Jt; pomtsforthe
Huskb &lt;~ nd R&lt;l nd1 Norman added
14
At Oxford . Hon Harpel scored a

The tnumph ~&lt;a s South Carolt ·
na's ftlth tn a row and boosted the
c;amft'ocks to 74 C metnnah
dropped to ~-i

Outdoors

Bow &amp; arrow season
\

underway for deer
DJ.o;trihutcd hy LPI
If you were unsucct·ssful dunn!(
the gu n season lot dcet m most
arr&lt;~&lt;. the fmal rPmammg option is
thr prlmifrvP wf'apons S(&gt;ason
Most stales conSider bow&amp; arrow
lin sorru• cases mcludmg cross
bows t and black powder weapons
to be "primtt tve ..
Primitive weapons r((juire a
hunt er to hunt wtth a handrcap
Nont• of the rapid fi re. long ran~&gt;!'
shot s arc possible with them The
n•,ult is that a greater degr('(' of
sktll is needed by the hunter, and
the !Ish &amp; game department • of th&lt;'
various stat(is are assured that
therr will 1x&gt; a fat lower success
ratio than was attained by hunters
with more modern gpar.
If you plan to hUnt with a bow, It Is
already much too late to start
getting ready. The first step Is to
famlliarlzl&gt; yourself with the bow
and ltscapabUltles. From that point
you must practice untll you're able
to take advantage of Its lull
potential. Hunters who haven't
already progressed t.l'that level will

.·

Buc~eyes defeat

Pitt upsetS Hoyas
By United Press lnternatmnal
:In six words, Georgetown roach
John Thompson said the proverbial
mouthful.
"The season is very, very long,"
quoth Thompson.
And seemingly getting longer a ll
the time.
The Beast of the East last night
;leU for the second straight time,
·~76 to Plttsburgh In the Big East
:opener for both teams.
: Is Thompson's potential dynasty
•already In decay?
' "We' rP not ready to fold our tents
;yrt, " Thompson said, completing
: his thought.
· Down by 10 with 1 17 to play, the
:Hoy as, 9-2, pulled wtthin 76- 72 wtlh
.42 seconds left Pltt's Daryl She-pherd and Joey Davtd stemmed the
:charge, however. hitting two free
:throws apiece in the final ~
seconds
Pltttortured Georgeto"11 ""h tiS
own !avonte weapon : defense. The
Panthers held the Hoyas to 41
percent shooting fr om the floor , ~
percent in the first half

The Daily Sentinei- Page:-5

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

find 11 U11posS1bl~ to get t het e before
tht· sea&gt;;On comes in
Black powder - or mu1.zle
loading r~le- hunt~rs may be able
to get mto the ac t IJ!Ore quickly, but
tht'y' t r st ul ~oiitg Io ha' P hurdles to
overcome llesid&lt;'&gt; just sighting in
the gun at a rangt&gt;. vou'll nt'!'!l to be
surr of your ablllty at 1arlous
ranges and under a va riPty of
mnd tt torLS You're only ~':Oing to get
onr shot and 11 has to count II you
('XJX'Ct to ha\'e vPnLc.;on m your
freezer come &gt;l'ring
ShU, the muzzle loader is a gu n,
and It will Hre without your having
to toll&lt;' up certain m11scles and get
in good physica l conditiOn A
muzzle loader can be as efficient as
a roodern rifle, but only with long
Intervals between shgts. ·
In eit her case, the thing to do now
Is determine that you're hunting an
area where there are deer at the
times when you expect to be there.
Good sroutlngls more Important to
the ]J"Imltlve weapons hunter than
It may be to others:\U you haven't
done yours yet, Ume s rumlng oot.

Michig~n State
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI I - It
turned Into a scoring duel between
Michigan State's Scott Skiles and
Ohio State's Dennis Hopson Thurs·
d~y night tn Sl. John Arena . Skiles
won the battle, but Hopson and his
Buckeyes won the war wlth an84-73
victory over the Spartans In the Big
Ten opener for both teams.
"Hopsoq was better tonight,"
said Ohio State Coach Eldon Miller.
"He 'dfd a good job defensively and
relxillllde(1 better."
·
Miller falled to mention Hopson's
32 points, just one less than Skiles,
who finished with 33.
"We moved the ball betler
tonJght, especially m the second
half," satd Miller "We scored both
inside and outside. We controlled
the basketball in the second haJJ."
Michigan State coach Jud Heath·
rote basically agreed with what
MUter said.
"Ohio State just outplayed us, "
said Heathcote. "They had too
many big guys inside. They played
very well both offensively and
defensively Wp were disappointed
In our perfmmance offensively.

SEu.ERSSHOOI'S -Ohlostale'sBradSellerstakesashotlromthe
side as Mlchipn stale's Carlton Valenllne altempts to block the shot.
Ohio stale won the Big 10 contest. UPI.

"We got a little tired in the seco nd
half and let It slip away from us
to"ards the end of the game ..
Hopson, a 6-foot5 junior. scored 19

of his 31 points In th&lt;' first hall, but it
was a run of eight consecutive Ohio
State pomts by the 7-foot Sellers
midway through the second half
that propelled the Buckeyes to their
seven th win in 10 games overall.
With Ohio State leading 6().5S,
Sellers poured m four fie ld goals In a
two-minut e period to boost the
Buckeye lead to 68·59 They never
led by less than eight the rest oJ the
way, despite some outstanding,
long· range shooting by Skiles.
Sklies led all scorers with A)..points, while Vernon Carr had 17 for
Michigan State. now 9-2 overall.
Ohio State broke a 10.10 tie oo a
16-loot jumper by Hopson with 13:56
left In the first half and the
Buckeyes built their margin to28-18
at the 9· 52 mark on a basket by
Clarence McCee.
At that point , Hopsor.. who hit 9of
10 shots from the floor the first half
and 12of 16 fort he game, went tot he
bench for a rest . Before he returned
to the floor'. the Spartans. on six
points by Carr and four by Skiles.
had erased the IO.pomt Buck eye
lead
Thr&lt;w baskets by Hopson and a
pa ir of free throws by McCee.
around a free throw by Sk iles, put
Ohio State back on top 36·29 The
Buckeyes led 45- 42 at halftime

Michigan dumps Indiana; Purdue downs Iowa
By Uniled l're!s lnlemational
It' s hard to figure. butt he Indiana
Hoosters bi('W thetr chance to upset
unbeaten Michigan because they
played so well at the start of the
game
The 15th rated Hoosiers S&lt;'Ored
th&lt;' first eight points of the contest
but watched as the second-ranked
Wo)Verlnes scored 17 of the next 19
points and eventually lost to
Mtchlgan 74-1&gt;9 Thursday night m
the ,Big Ten ronferencr' opener for
both teams
In other Btg Ten games Thurs
day, Purdue downed Iowa 76-73,
Ohto State topped Mtchtgan State
84-73 and No 14 lllmms do"ned
Mmnesota 76-57
· V.e got early basket s and a
qutek lead whtch was great ," satd
Indiana coach Bob Kmght, whose
team dropped to 1\.3 with the loss
.. B11.w that was a Iso our undolrlg
because we got careless with the
lead We stood around some and got
careless wnh the ball Our impa
trence and them playing well was
disastrous for us"
The Wolverin es led 35-27 at
halfttme, but lndtana went on a 1~
ru n tn the first three mmutes of the
second half to cut the Mtchigan lead

Baseball

to 39.J7 on back ttl' back ba skets by
freshman Ricky Calloway, who had
17 pomts
Michigan responded wtth 17 of the
11&lt;'Xt 24 points for It s la rgest lead,
56-44, midway through the seco nd
half .Junior guard Steve Alford led
another Indiana rally, hitting 14 of
hiS game--high 22 points m the final
10 minutes to pull the Hoosters
within three pomts three times m
the !mal slx minutes
" It "as th&lt;' type of basketball
game I expected It tobe."M ichlgan
coach Bill Frieder said " It was
very aggresstve They 1the M~t•hr
gan playerst were ready to play but
they may have been a little too
anX.IOUS "

Michigan guard Gal) Grart
scored 21 points, Rov Tarpley
added ~ and Antome Joubert
added 18 as the Wolverines raised
thetr n&gt;COrd to 13.0, thetr best-ever
start
The only Hooters th&lt;' lllmms
basketball rea m has are freshmen
and they don 't start But Ill&lt;' lllmt
dtdn 't need th&lt;'m to defeat the taller
Minnl"'ta Gophers 76-57
Illinois outrebounded Minnesota
35-22 and allowed Hoot Gopher
sta rtmg center John Shask) on!)

maveric~

because of his inabtli ty to keep up
"ith sk)•rocket ing player salark&gt;s
and maintenant.V of baseball's
oldest stadium, ComiSkey Park.
One of his last major decrsions
was to bring in Tony LaRussa to
manage th&lt;' White Sox at the end of
A mPITlorial se n 1iCP was sche
th&lt;' 1979 season LaRussa . now the
duled for Saturday at a South Side dPan or AmPrican U&gt;ague West
chu rch
managers. brought a title to Ihe Sox
The former owner of the Chi
In 1983. thelr first slnrr Veeck's "Go
caggo White Sox. St. LouLS Browns. Go Sox" team of 19:i9
Cleveland Indian s a nd a Milwaukl:'e
" He took a chanct' on me when
minor league club entered Illinois most would n't have... la'Russa
Masonic Hospital Monday mght to said
undergo respira tory therapy He
Typical or the reac tion 10 Veeck's
dted of cardtac arrest Thursday dPath were the commen ts of
morning
another mavenck baseball owner,
Veec k was wtck'ly known fo r Veeck 's long1tme fnend and former
r lrcus·ltkc marketmg techniques to A' s o"ner, Charlie Finle)'
put the fans tn the stands, which
"lie was one of the finest men
mcluded once sendmg a midget to tha t I ever met m the fteld of
the plate Hts keen judgment or sport s," Finley said "Baseball will
baseball talent was often masked
miss htm without a question ..
by the carnival -like promotrons.
"Baseball has lost a great
Veeck "rettred" from baseball friend," said Baseball Commls·
aft er selling the Whtte Sox to sioner ' Peter Ueb&lt;&gt;rroth "Bill
current o"11ers Jerry Reinsdort • Veeck dedicated his lift' and all his
and Eddie Emhom in 198!.
energies to the ga m~ he loved so
The parting was a bitter om· "' much. His impact on th&lt;' ga me will
'
Veeck. constantly running th&lt;' Sm live on "
Veeck carne mto baseball be
oo a shoestring. sold the club

RECTION - COR·
Fruth
~armacy

Coupon Circular

LIQUID • PLUMR
32 oz. Read

the early SCQ rlng lead In the Big Ten
wit h 33 points, but Ohio State's
Dennis Hopson SCQred 32 points and
Brad Sellers added 22 points and 14rl?bounds to produce a Buckeye
1ictot)' and a 7-3 record
"We moved the ball better
torught , especially m the second
hall," satd Ohto State coach Eldon

Mtlle~r~~~~~~~~~
~31

JACKSON Pft&lt;E · AT J~ WEST
Phone 446 •52•

·2FOR $200 !~n

And Mai~ln Rebate
'
v;/'re Sorry For Any lnc~nvenience This May Have
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FRUTHALLPHARMACY
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1

J:ir7"\. ,_

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,.,.,,,,Middleport

Rutland, Ohto 45775

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' Btll" Brown, Owner
Phone Ull) ,., 7777

,,

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
ot Columbus, 0

804W. Mam
992·2lll

PomerCJy

9922ts5

Brown's Fire &amp;
;and
Equl'pmen\ Sate&gt;
Servtce

Natronwrde Ins. Co.

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Locust &amp; Beech Stree1

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LET FAITH HELP YOU START THE
NEW YEAR WITH A NEW YOU

Pomero~

INSURANCE.
SERVICES

" MEIGS TIRE
\ ' CENTER, INC.
John F
Ph

CLRSSIFIED RDS
THE DAILY
SENTINEL

TEAFORD
116 S Second
Pometoy

992·3315

REA~TY

[H
RE!LTO~

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE
GroceriesGeneral Merchandrse

MiddleportPomeroy,"'h.

214 E. Marn
992·5130 Pnmornv

ft'\ 1\
u,

Read the Best seller
Read the

Racine 949·2550

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Four th and
Main St , Middleport Rev Calvin Minnis,
past or Mrs Elvin Bum~ardner, supt
Sunda ~ School 9 JO a m., Wort1hlp :service
10 45 a m
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Joseph B Hoskin§ , evangeli st Sunday
Bibl e Stud~ !'I a m , Wor ship , 10 a m , Sun-

Fult1, Mgr
992· 2101

Pomeroy

day f&gt;venlng servi ce 6 p m , Wednesday

RACINE PlANING MILL ,
Mill Work·
Cabrnet Making

Syracuse
992-3978
TRINITY CHURat, tlJ'\1 W H Pm'ln,
r:astor: Debti.e Buck. suroay School Supt.
Church School9: 15 a.m., Wor.;hip Smrle lO:lJ
a.m. Choir n'hearsal. Tuesday, 7 lJ p m
under dlrecllon d Lois Burt
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE. Comer Union and Mulben)', tlJ'II
'Thomas Glen McOung, ~stor OydE&gt; Render
son, S S Supt ., SuOOay School. 9 lJ am,
morning wcrship 10: ll a m . f'Vf'll.ing service ti
p m : mid v.'t'ek Sl.'IVlce, Wednesday. 7 p:m.
GRACE EPISCOPAL CIIURQI, 3:!6 E
MaUl St., l'oml'roy. Sunday servlc\'S Hoi)
rommwUon on the f1rsl Swdayol each month,
and combined wtttl morning prayer Cl1 llll'
lhktld SUnday . Morning prayer and senron on
all othEr SuOOays C( !he month Qum:h Scho&lt;i
and N\1~ care provkJed Col!t&gt;e lnrr ln 1M
Parish Halllmm&lt;dtatety ro~~ow~ng the savtre
POMEROY CHURCH Of CHRIST, 212 W
Main St.. N&lt;U Proudfoot, pastor. Blbl• Scho&lt;i
9 .Dam; Morning worshJp, 10:l1 a.m, Youth
"""'lngs, &amp;00 p m. Evening w&lt;JT&gt;htp 7 00 p
m W€drx&gt;sday night pra)'t'l' mt:t'ting and Bib!£&gt;
~udy . 7' 00 p.m.
TilE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Buttl'm.lt
AVP., PornmJy Mr.s Dont Wlnlng ln charge
SuOOay holiness meeting. 10 a m , Sunday
'SdiOO. 10:ll am Surxiay School YPSM
Eloist' Adams. lrodcr 7 lJ p.m Salvation
\ .rrl('('Clng, vanous 5P('akers aOO musk: specials
·l'hunday, U ll a m "to 2 p m t...itdies H()l"'lf
l...t&gt;ag\1('. mem~ ln ~. aU W()l'lrfl
Invited, u; p.m. lltursday, eorpo ~
t.1asss tYOU!lt Poopi~Bibk&gt; t. 7: IJ p.m. Blbl&lt;?
Study and Prayer f!1('(')1ng, '¥"' lO!he public
POMEROY WESTSIDE ClllJROl OF
CliRm, llZ!iChlkirm's Home Road (Coonty

RALL'S

rvenlng serv1ce, 7 p m

PENTE COSTAL ASSEMBLY. Kactne ,
Rt 124 Willi am Hoba ck. pastor Sunda y
School 10 a.m : Sunday eovt&gt;nlng service 7
p m WC'dnesday evE' nlng service 7 p m

BEN

~FRANKLIN'

'f

CARPE NT ER BAPTIST Don Cheadle,

Sup! Su nd a y School 9 :Jl a m Morning
Worship 10 30 a m Prayer service. a ltern

Middleport, Ohto

ate Sundays

('K&amp;C=RS

0

MIDDL EPORT PENTECOSTAL . Th ird
Av&lt;&gt; Rev Cla rk BakE&gt;r, pasto r Ca r l Not

!Ingham. Sunday School Supt Sunday
&amp;hool 10 a m with classes for all ages
Evening servi ces a1 tip m WE'dnesday Bl
ble stud y at 7 30 p m Youth services Frl
da y at730pm
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP 128MIIISt,
Middleport Brother Chuck McPherson .
pastor Sunday School 10 am. Sunda~
evening services at 7 p m and \\edn esday
serv l('f'!l; a f 7 p m

212 E. Main Street
992·3785. Pomeroy

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Ken nNh Smith,
pastor Sunda y School 9 30 am , chu rch
serv ice 7 30 p m youth fellowship 6 30 p
m. Blbl l" stud y, Thursda y 7 30 p m
FULL GOSPEL LI GHTHO USE JIJ45
Hiland Road. PomNoy Tom Kelly, pas·
tor Dann } La mbe1 1 S S Sup! Sunday
mo rnm g serv lcf at 10 a m . Sunda y €'Vet
lng sen. tce 7 30 p m Tuesday a nd Thursday Sel'\'lcPS a t 7 30 p m
WORD OF FAIT H. 9J Ml!l Sl. Middle
port Sunda;: mornln~~t s!'rv tcr 10 l S am
Sunda y evenIn~ 7 30 Thursda y mom1ng
Bible study 10 am Wedn es da y t;&gt;\&gt;('nlng
'j JOpm
NEW HAV EN CH\ HCH Of Til E NA·
ZARE:NE. R£&gt;v Glenrton Stroud. pastor
Sunday School 9 30 a rn , Wors hip servi ce
10 30 am Yout h SE'f\ l('f' Sunday 6 15 p
m Sunda yf'v enlng 5M'ViCt'7 OOpm. Wed
nesdav P raver M ec lln ~ and BiblE' Stud~
7 00 p· m ·
NEASE SETTLEMEN1' CHURCH Sun
dav alternoon Sf'rvlces at 2 30 Thursday
e\Pnmg sf'rvlces at 7 XI

rom•

1985 DODGE ARIES

$7795
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1979 Ford Thunderbird ........... $1795

Auto .. PB, PS, air.

1979 Chevette ......•..................,$1095

4 Dr., 4 sp .

·1978 Olds Delta 88 ................. $1795
Auto. , PB, PS , air.

1978 Ford Fairmont Sta. Wgn.... $1295

6 cyl., PB, PS, air.

1975 Chevy Monza ..................... $595

2 Dr., auto., runs good.

1974 Ford F-250 Pickup ............ $695

4 Speed.

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.1972 Chevy Long Bed ................. $695
Stand., 6 cyl.

1972 Ford Window Van .............$395

R.uns good.

Complete
Automohve

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

f'fY SUnday .
GRAHAM
UNITED MITIIODIST.
Preaching 9:30a.m. first a nd second, Sun
days of each month, thrd and fourth Sun·
da}' t'achmonth worship setvlcE'S at7.30 p
m ; Wednesday evPnings at 7· 30 p m
Pray('r and Bible Stud)·.
SEVENT H DAY ADVENTIST, Mulb·
erry Heights Road , Pomeroy Leroy
Bruch, Pastor; Sabbath School Supertntl'lldl'llt. Rhonda Markin Sa bbath SChool
beg ins at '2 p m oo Satllrday with worship
Sf'rvlre following at J· 15 Everyooe wei-

cause his father wa s workmg for
Ill&lt;' Cubs in the late 19lls
He · got a taste of basebal l
management In 1941. when he
purchased the Arncrk·an Associa ·
I ton Mllwauket' Brewers. The club
was oo the verge of bankruptcy. but
Veeck 's Innovative promouorLS
brought crowds back to Milwaukee,
and the club s&lt;.&gt;t attendance records
while winning three pennant s

4 Dr .. 4 cyl., auto ., PB •. PS.
air , new , only 600 miles .
50.000 mile warranty .

ElliS &amp;SONS SOHIO

Road 761 992-~ . Vocal mustc. Surxlay Wor
'sii'C&gt;IOa.m.; Bible Study Ua m., Wonhlp 6p
m. W - y. Bible Study, 7 p m
OLD DEXTER BIBI..E CHRIStlAN
CHURCH. Charieti Hatt\eid, pastor, Unda
~an. Sup!. '5limay SCI1ool ~ IJ a.m.; pm~d&gt;
Lng servi.Cl'!l, ftrst and lhlrd Sunia)l foll&lt;Ming
Sumay Scl'ool. Yoolh n&gt;e&lt;'tlrlg, 7 IJ p.m. f!V·

Bill Veeck dies

CHICAGO iUPI t - Bill Veeck,
one of baseball 's most colorful
personalities who "as known for his
promotional ex pertise, was hailed
for his love of ArnPnca' s GamP
followinJ( his death Thursday at agP
71

Should

two points and onp rebound .
"I think Shasky was !rust 1 ated in
the first half because he didn't haw
any points," said IllinoLS forward
Elrem Wmters
"We have not been able to
esta blish ourselves on the boards."
said Minnesota coach Jtm Dutcher
"We didn 't get any Inside baskets
We didn't get any rebounds "
lllinms rat sed tis overall record to
1o'2 while Minnesota fell to 1~
overall . The lllinl have won .11
stratght games at home
Tony Wysinger led Ill mots wtth 19
points
The closest game of !he nigh! was
Purdue's 76-73 overtime wtn over
Iowa that raised the surpnsmg
Boilermakers' record to 12 2
Purdup sophomone Trov Lewis,
who finished with 24 points. made a
jump shot at the las t second to send
the game Into overttme.
"LE&gt;Wts ts a heck or a a clutch
shooter," said lm&lt; a coach George
R&lt;l&gt;eling "The fa ns gal thetr
money 's worth. "
Iowa, which play&lt;'Ci 10 of its first
14 games on the road . fell to 1~ J\1
Lorenzen !-'Ill 15 points !01 th&lt;'
Hawke;es
Michigan State's Scott , kites tmk

'

ThiS Message and Church Directory ~~'}J.I~ron~d By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.

.

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
- Sls tPr Harrh•tt Warner. Supt Sunday
Schoo \9 :lJ a m.; Morning Worship . 10:4S
am
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST. David
Mann . ministe r Wllllam Snouffer.Sunday
Schoo l Supt Sunday Schoo l. 9' 30 a.rn ,
M ornln~ Worship 10 30 a.m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Po·
mer oy Pi k£' Dil\kl Hunt . pas tor Jack
Neot&gt;ds, Sunday Sc hool Dlreector Sunda y
Scool. 9 30 a m.: Mo~g Worship. 10:30.
·evrninJZ worship, 7 00 p.m. Tues da y Vlsl
1at1on, 7 p m W!'dnE."Sda y. P rayPr serv!C'f',
7 30 p m . Ml sslon Fr!('11ds. 7 JO p m .
Glrls ln Action. 7•:JO p.m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bat
ley Run Road Rev Emmett RawSQn, pas tor Ha ndltoy Dunn supt Sunday School.
10 am, Sunda yt&gt;vrnlnftservice 7.30p.m
Bible trarhln~. 7·:KJ p m Thursda y.
SYRA CUSE MISSION. CHE&gt;rry St. Sy . ·ra&lt;'USP SC'I'\'I CPS. lOa m Sunda y Evening
-serv lt't's Sunday and Wf'dn esday at 7 00 p.
··m
• • MIDDLEPORT CHVRCH OF CHRIST
, '.[N CHRISTIAN UNION, R•v K•lthEbtln ,
·: -pastor Sunda): Sc.:hool 9 30 a m Wade
• "HCiyman , supt . Mornln ~ Worship , 10 :30a
• . ..m. SIJ'hday P\' f'ntn,R service 7::.t p.m ..
. •Wl'dn NK!a~ Pra)'N Ml't'll n ~. 7:JO p.m.
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
Raclne . Rt&gt;v J a mC'S Sa 1t t'ffl E'ld . pa5tor
Fn'l•ma n Wllll a m ~. Supt Sunda y School
9 45 am . Sunda\ and Wednc.&gt;Sday E'Ven
In~ srrvtcrs . 7 p m
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
Cor n£'r Slx th and PalmPr Ear l Eden. Pas
tor Ra) F'l&lt;-lds S S Sup! Dan Rig-g s,
Ass! Sup! Sunday School. 9 l!l a m ;
Mornin g Worship, 10 15 am .. Sund ay
Ev('fllng St&gt;f"\1\c{'. 7 p m Youth m l"f'hng
7 30p m Wl'dnesday f'Vf"nlngs£'1"VlCE'7 P
m . Cholr pr&lt;~ c ll ce 8 p m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST.
5t h and Main Bob M£'1 ton. m inister AI
H..rtson. assor m!nlst&lt;'r : Mike G(' rlach.
Su nda \' Sc hoo l SupNint {'nd('n!
Blbll'
Schoo l !:j 10 a.m . M o rn l n~ W,or!! hl p 10. 30
am E\t•nln~ Worship 7' 00 p m Wt'dn t'~
dav. 7 011 p.m Pra YN ffif:'(&gt;!l n ~
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF TH E NA
ZARENE, Co pastor!; RPv C h arlf."~ Coylf'
and HP" Ntmcy Coy](' Bill Whit r.Sundav
Sc hoo l Supt Sunda'f School 9 :w am ,
Mornin ~~t Worship \O. JOa m , EvanRelisllc
mN'tlnJ: 7 00 p m W1~nt'Sda y, 7 00 p m
Pra\'('r mwtlng
.
l iNITED PRF.SBYTEKit\N MINISTRY
Of MEIGS COVNTV
Rt&gt;\'. Ke• Wllldneon
HARR ISONVILLE PRESBYTERIA~
CHUHCII - Su nday Worsh iP Srrv lc~
9 OOa m , Church Srhoo ll0. 15a .m , BiblE&gt;
Stud\' Su nda\' 7 .'Wl p m .. P1 aye r Group

Wron(&gt;Soay ;j , 9 oo" m
MIDDLEPORT P RESBYTERIA N Church sr hoo l 10 1 ~ a.m. MornlnR War·
ship 11 1~ am. TU('sday, 10 00 a.m B1bl l'
Stud\', Thursday. 7: 3Q p m Blbit&gt; Stud y.
SYRA CUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY
TERIAN - Worship serviet- 10:15 a.m.
Chu1 r'h SchoollO OOa .m. Tues day , 10 1i.m
Blblr SIUd) , Sunday, l:i p.m J unior and Se·
nlor ll lJ;: h Youth Gro ups
'
RUTLAN D CHURCH OF GO D. Pastor ,
Juh n E"an s Sunday School 10·00 am ,
Sund a\ Morning Worship 11 ·00 am . Chil ·
drrn 's Chut·ch 11 a.m Suiiday Ewnlni!:
S4•r' I&lt;'P 7 00 p m Wfd . 6 p.m. Younf[ La
d!l&gt;S' AuKIIIary Wednesday, 1 p.m Fam·
lt v WorshiP
HAZEL COM MUNITY CHURCH. Ntar
Lonli{ Bottom Edsel Hart . pastor . Sunda v
School 9· 30 a.m.: Worship 10. 30 a .m ,
Prayer m~!ln g Thursda y, 7:30pm
MIDDL EPO RT FREEWI LL BAPTIST
CHURCH. Cornf'r Ash and Plum . Ralph
Cundiff, pastor SundaySchooltO·OO a m ;
Mornlna Worship, l1 00 a.m.; Wednesday
arM'·Saturday Evening ServlcPS at 7·:1) p

m.

SERMONETTE

SOUTIIERN CLUSTE R
Re" Ro1er Gractftto". Paul Mc:Gulre
Rev. Keith Radet
APPLF: GROVE - CHun·h Sc. hool 9 00
a .m Worship, 10 00 a m tflrs t and thl rd
S und e~ysL UMW Sfl.cond Tuesday. 7 .iO p
m, Pr ~ yN met'll n ~. Wednesday,; p m
tGrac('l
BETHANY - Worsh ip. 9 a m . Church
School. tO a m . Blhh• St udv Wcd nrsday,
10 am, Dun·as Wom&lt;'n's f('\lowshlp ,
Wfdnesduy, 11 am tMcGulrC'l
CARM EL- Chu rch School 9 ll am
Worship. J() 4'i a m SPcond and Fourth
Sunda ys, F('llowsh lp dlnnrr with Sut! on
third Thursda'f . 0. 30 p m t McGu irPI
EAST LETART - ChuC'Ch School9 a m
WOI'Shlp 10 a m ~ nd and fourth Sun
days t iMW fl rst T~Jcsda -. 7 l.l p m
(t~race\

LETART FALLS - Wors hip 9 a m.
Chu rc h Sc hoo! 10"' m tGrac(")
MORNINGSTAR - Worship, 9. 4Sa m
C~hrc h School. tQ: J() a.m: Bible STudy
Thursday. 7:)l p m. (Rader I
RACINE WESLEVAN - Cbur&lt;'h School
10 a m , Worship 11 a m : UMW fourth Moo
day a l 7 :1! p.m.: M&lt;'n'!i Prayer Breakfa~l
Wednesda'f. 7 a.m. tGraet&gt;l
SUTION - Church SchOOl, 9 30 a m .
Morning Worship 10 •s a.m fir st and third
Sunday~; Ftllowshlp dinner with Carm&lt;'l
third Thursday, 6:30 pm. 1McGulr{') .
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST. Oliver
Swain, Supt Sunday SChool 9·30 a.m ~

ery weE&gt;k.

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, Rev
Tom State-n, putor Sunday School 9 :ll a
m.: Evenlnr aervtce 7: :ll p m Wf"dnesday
prayer meetlna: 7: l&gt; p.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Duant Warden , mlnisler. Blble
class 9: 30 I m.: Morni ng Worship 10 :.1 a .
m.; Even\niJ Worship 6: XI p.m. Wednes·
day Bible Study 6 IJ p.m
NEW STIVERSVtL~E COMM UN ITY
CHURCH, Sunday S&lt;hoot oervtce. 9: 45 a.
m ; Wonhlp service 10:30 a.m.;
Eva ngellallc Serv. 7: Jl p.m. Wednesda y; Prayt&gt;r m et~ llng 7· 30 p.m . Thursday

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN.
Roger Wa tson, pastor Crenson Pran ,
Sunday ScRool Supt Morning worship 9' JO
a m. Sunday Schoo l10 :30 am: Evening
SM"Vke, 7 JO p m
MT. UNION BAPTIST , Donald Shue.
pastor, Jot&gt; Sayre, Sunday School Supt
Sunday Sc hool 9 4~ am , Even ing wor
ship G .'lJ p m.· Prayer Me-t&gt;tlng , 6:30p.m.
Wl'&lt;lnesday
TUPPE RS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST Jody Holl11nd, minister. [)('ryl
Wells , Supt. Morning worship , 8:00a m.,
Chu rch School9 00 a .m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE Rev Herbt'r l Grate, pastor
Frank: Riffl e, sup!. Sunda y School 9: XJ a
m.: w ors hip !M!rvlce, 11 a .m a nd 7 p.m
Sunday Wednesday, 7 p m Prayer meet·

Stepping Into the door of a new year should be an exciting
experience Yet lor millions of people there Is a feeling of fear .
"Fe~". says Webster , "Is a painfUl emotion that brings about
alarm, dread , or disquiet." Fear, then , Is destructive to successful
living. Like a drop of Ink in a glass of water, a little Is just enough to
color everything
We all have circumstances that come Into our lives that work for or
against us. Fear really depends on our response to our
circumstances rathe~ than the circumstances themselves Fear has
been a livin g reality In some lives that has tied people Into knots and
made their lives a living hell.
The key to over-coming lear Is faith tn God. He loves us with an
ever-lasting love and He alone holds our fUture. If we have true faith
we can not Uve In real lear In Revelation 21:8 "fear" heads the llstct
sins that wiU keep men out of heaven David found hls help In God
when his life was lhreatmed by fear. "I sought the Lord" he says In
Psalm 34:4 " and He heard me and delivered me from all my fears ."
God's Word promiseS dellvPralllF"trom fear In Psalm 34:7, " The
angel of the Lord encampeth roundltbout them that fearhlmandHe
delivereth them."
As you face the year ahead. what tears are threatening you• Be
assured , God Is your answer You still have a choice.

UIR ·

LAUREL CLIFF FREE MEJ'KlDIST
CHURCH. Rev . Roberl Mllltor, pastor Robt•rt E . Barton, Director of ChrlslianEdu·
ca t ion, Sti."W~ Dllln, assistant. Sun(lay
Sc hoOl 9::11 am : Morntnr worshiP Jl :JO
am : Choir pratllce, Sunday 6: 3(1 p m.,
Evening worship 1 .ll p.m. Wednesda y
Prayer and Bible Study, 7, :1) p m
DEXTER CHURCH Of CHRIST,
Charles RUJstll Sr . mtnlster. fUtit Macomber, sup!. Sunday School 9· :1) am ,
Worship SE&gt;rvice 10 30 a m Bib If! 1tudy,
Tuesday. 7 :1) p.m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LAITER DAY SAINTS. Port.
land·Raclne Road: William Roulh , pastor
Linda Evans, church tctlool director .
Church sctlooi9: Jl a .m .: Momlng wonlp
10:30 a.m .; Wednesday .venlnJ prayer
scrvk'es, 7: Jl p.m
BETIU.EHEM BAPI'IST. Rov. Earl
S hul~r. pa1toi' WoratUp service, 9:30a .m.
sunda y S&lt;boot 10 : Jl a.m. Bible Sllidy •ndil
Drayer serviCE" Thursday, 7: • p.m . _

L.,___:;__________..;·:' ....-----... .,

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Friday, January 3. 1986

The Daily Sentinei- Page'--7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
'

By The Bend

A kickoff meeting fo~ a youth
program ~~ the Racine First
Baptist Chun:h has been set for
Satunday at 6::ll p.m. at the church.
Open to both high school and
junior high. students, till' program
will feature fellowship fun , Chris·

Friday. January 3, 1986

Page-6

\

Wolf Pen community happenings
Holiday visitors oi Mr. and Mrs. Helen Johnson w~·Mr. and Mrs.
Rorert C. Balley Sr., Wolf Pen James Johnson and Teresa, Mr.
community, Included Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. John Davis, Melissa,
Carl Balley, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Larry Jotmwn, Tahnee Jo and
Bailey Jr., Christine Bailey, all Brady, Mr. and Mrs. Don Tillis,
local; Marty and Curt Peters, Henry Eblin · and Ann Clonch,
Minerva; Arlene lim, Mr. and Mrs. Annette, and Duane Johnson.
Clarence Mattox \Jr.. Mark. Sandi.
Saturday vlsllors of Charley D.
and Keith, Mr. and Mrs. John Smith were Mrs. Daniel Worley,
Zurclter, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Stacy Jo and Daniel It Daniels, W.
Wayne Zurclle'r. Tim and Monica, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Dqyl~ Knapp,
West Columbia, W.Va.
KaU and Charles Knapp, Micrelle
Mrs. Rorert C. Balley Sr., Peterson, K~&gt;VIn Knapp, Judy,
recently visited h!'r iitotrer In Michelle and Amy .
Mlne!Va to assist In h!'r care
Christmas Eve guests of Mr. and
following eye surgery. While In Mrs. Robert Venoy were Mr. and
MtnE&gt;rva, sll' also visited hl'r sister · Mrs. Robert Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
and family and otll'r friends and Steve ilaggy, Brad, Stephanie Mr.
relatives.
and Mrs. Ronald Russell, Mandy,
Mr. and Mrs. George Warner Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Mark
wereChrlstmasDayvisltors&lt;1Mr. Venoy, Toni Venoy, Lesla Long,
and Mrs. Richard Warner and Cindy Stanley, Mr. and Mrs. Greg
family, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Venoy . . daughter, Robin Venoy,
Christmas dinner guests of Mrs. Terry Wayhind, and Mr. and Mrs.

Holiday notes from
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Van lnwagen

Vanlnwagen vows Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Vanlnwa- Debbie and .Keith Vanlnwagffi and
gen &lt;1 Bradbury Road. Middleport . ·Linda and Jerry Vanlnwagffi, wUI
wUI observe thl'ir 40th wedding be hosting a reception honoring till'
anniversary with a renewa l of th!'ir couple immediately follm&lt;1ng the
wedding vows on Sunday. Jan . 5, al mw exchange. Mr. and Mrs.
, 2 p.m. at !he Bradbury Church of Vanlnwagen ha,·e four grandsons.
A reception honoring the couple
• · Christ.
will be held in the church social
Th~&gt; R~&gt;V . John Wright . will
room from 2 to 5 p.m.
pertorm till' ceremony.
Friends and relatives are cor·
Vanlnwagen'" and till' former
Freda Beach of Bradbu ry were dially inviled to call during till' open
married at Pomeroy on Jan. 5. 1916. I"ElCrption hours.
Thelr sons and daughtf'rs-in-law.

_New pastor named
The Rev . Lamar O'Brvant is
new pastor of the First SouthNn
Baptist Church of Meigs County.
located at 41872 Pomeroy Pike.
Pomeroy.
. He will begin Jan . 5. Origina lly
from Smyrna, Ga., O'Bryant and
wife, .,Joyce , came to Ohio in 1969
through the Christian Service
: j:orp, Home Miss ion Board, for
work In the Ironton area . Sharon
.Baptls h Church was founded as a
·result . He served as pastor there
16 years before coming to the
Pomeroy church .
Among offices held by O'Bry ·
11nt are Sunday School Director
of the Scjoto Valley Baptlsl
Association and organizer and
leader of the Scioto Vallev
Buckeye Baptist Builders.
· The O'Bryants have ' three
st&gt;ns. Marty . Mike and Matthew .
l'hey will reside on Rocksprings
· . Road. Pomeroy.
Services at the church a re held
at 9:30 a. m. for Sund a\· School.

Rl'v. Lamar O'Bryant
10 :.\0 a.m. worship serv ice and 7
p rn . Sunday p\·ening serv\rP.
with a Wednrsday night serv ice
at-;- p .m .

Long Bottom area notes
By Melody Roben.~
Grace Price is rec uperating at
home followi ng treatment at \'ole·
rans ME&gt;moria l HospitaL Hrr
daughtet. Carolvn \\'ha ir)·. has oIso
been hospitalized.
As a special project . the gir l
scouts of Jill' Long Bottom
Rrelsvile communit,· d!sn·ibut«l
• holiday remembrances 10 ,;e\wal
sick and shut ins.

HPn• for a lu liday· \isit with Mrs.
F.r11(&gt;stinr Hayman haw• tx'C&gt;n her
son -in-law and daughtrr. Mr. and
~1 rs. E Ibert Fitzpatrick. La ncaster .

Mr. and Mrs. Rill Thurston have
mo\'l'!l to Columbu s for !he winter.
ll&lt; •tl\ Young is recuperating
from J'f'Cf'nt hf'ar1 surgP r~·~''"' notes for the Long

Bottom
column rna\· he sent to Melody
Hotl'rts. Box 7. l nng Bottom.

Mr. and Mrs. Dale Walburn. Jill
Walburn and Brittany. Middleport,
have returned from Kingsport,
Tffin. whl're thl'y spent Christmas
with Mr. and Mrs. Steve Walburn,
Summer and Tyler. Christmas
night they were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Zeb Ledford. Enroute home.
they visited In Shady Valley. Tenn.
with Mr. and Mrs. Houze Cretsln·
ger. Walburn Is a lawyer in thl'flrm
ct. Moore. Stout, WaddE'II and

1

. ' prizP was \\'On b~· Carol~· n \ 'Jn
Meter.
Attending wr rr .Iran !\ell)· and

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wym, and
Wesley of Florida are spending
some time with Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Thoma, Mrs. Iva Johnson
and otrer relatives.
ChrlstmasDinnerwasenjoyedat
the oome of Iva Johnson; those
enjoying It were Mr. and Mrs.
Howard ·Thoma, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Wynn and Wesley, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Barr, and family and
Mrs. Harley Johnson and Tammy.
Mr.andMrs. RobertMurphyand
family, Mr. and Mrs. John E.

arou~d

Murphy , Chris. Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Evans and sons. Mr. and
Mrs. Greg Davis anC: famlly and
Mr. and Mrs John Downs and sons
were Christmas guests of Mr. and
Mrs. John R. Murphy and Peggy.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kail,
Barbara Hatfield, Charles Knapp.
Michelli' Peterson and Kevin
Knapp, Judy, Michelle and Amy
were Christmas visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning,
Ronald, Mrs. DorothY Reeves and
Bryan Reeves, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie
Frank, Sarah Beth, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Darnell, Jeff and Missy and
Freda and Carolyn Elam were
Christmas day guests of Mrs.
Gladys Tuckerman.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Darnell and
Missy was Thursday afternoon
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Smith.

jr)l'Wll/!l!;(;p...}inno !l!li(fJ..

Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny McDonald.
Mindy, Angle and Danny. Jr ..
Rutland, had as Christmas dinner
guests, Mr. and Mrs. David Dond·
ding, Athl'ns; Katb)' Yasrbrough,
Shad!'; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas T.
Simmons, sons, Thomas and Tyler,
Reedsville. and Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas B. Simmons, Rutland. and
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Shuster.

Fermer• Bancaharea.lnc .

of Farmert Bank end

Sovlngo Company. 211
Woot Second Stroot. Po·

meroy, Ohio, according
to ha bylaws. on the chird
Wednetdly of January,

1988, at 3:00 p.m. lor
the purpoH of electing
directors and the tran·
uctton of such other bu·
sinau •• may properly
come before uid mHt·
ing.
. • «
Pout E. Ktoeo.
S&lt;tcretory

\.
(12) 27: 11 J 3. 9. , 2

MWA Plaque lor COIIICientlous and dedleated com·
munlty service awarded lo the above author lor re·
cordlns an~ preservlnK loeal hislory. This publica·
lion and others, glvm by Clinton M. Burdette, Ak·
ron, lonnerly ol Coolvme, wm be placed in the
Athel18 County Hlstorlal Society and Muoeum U·
brary.
Illes and "carl' plat l's" were sent
to shut·lns. New 1986 trustees
l'lected arl' Eug~&gt;ne Griffis. Guysville. and Wilbur Roblno;on , AI ·
fred.

Gregory birth is announced
Clark, Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents are Lucy Gregory, Shinnston , W. Va ., and Bill and Sue
Gregory, Mannington. W. Va.
Paternal great-grandfather Is Murray Maley, Shinnston, W. Va.
The child has a half·brothl'r and a
halt-sistl'r, John and Lelgha, l..e·
tart, W.Va.

, EAGLE RIDGE- Meigs Cou nt \
; Fox Chasers As~ta tion rnt'!'t
Friday 7 p.m.. clubhouse on F.agle
,.f;UdgP.

AGRI BbSS

12. -VOlH YOll

· POMEROY - Meigs County
; REACT members meeting Friday,
':'7::ll p.m., senior cil iz(&gt;ns center.

.

: POMEROY - RI'VIval, Olive
•Community Chun:h, Friday, Satur·
':day and Sunday at 7: :ll p.m.
,Ughtly. HE'rbertlnscoe evangelist.
.music by Pll'asant Valley Singers.

.
~

•

POMEROY - Meigs County
;Pomona Grange meets 8 p.m.
:Frtlay Rook Springs Grange HaiL

•

.lREAR WARRANTY •

95
ONLY S39

Amanda CIIR!Iine Gregory

HARRISONVl LLE - Harrto;on ville l.odgP HI F&amp;AM meets
Sa turday , 7: 30p.m.. temple. work
in masll'r ma son degree. All
master masons arf' welcome.
. SUNDAY
ATHENS - Boyd and Blaine
Cornwell - "Master's Enoourag·
ers" -;- at East Athens Church of
Christ Sunday 7 p.m.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Chapter
Order of Eastern Star practice
Sunday 2 p.m. fo r Tuesday's 7:45
p.m. meeting. Memhers are to
wear chapter dres!!ef on Tuesdav.

54 Misc. Mercttandise

LINE OF
FARM AND AUTO
BATIERIES

Calendar
.

OF

On December 16, 198&amp;, in

All SIZES IN STOC~

.IW!Iin Alan Harrison

Harrison birth
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Harrison,
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
of th!'lr fi rst child, a son, Justin
Alan, born at Holzer Medical
Center Dec. 12.
The Infant weighted six pounds,
14 ounces and was lllnches long.
MatE'11181 grandparents are' 'Mr.
and Mrs. Hl'rman Roberts of
Pomeroy. and till' paternal grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Howard
l:larrtson r/ Citeshlre. Dessil' Boggl'SS and Dorthy Rorerts are great
grandmothers and Mrs. Ruth Dooglas Is a maternal great-great·
grandmother. Mrs. Clara Harrison,
Galllpoils, and Mrs. Faye Robil' ot
Mesa, Arizona are great ·
grandmoth!:rs.

MGM Farm City

Dixon birth
Roger and Suzy Dixon, VlctoMa ,
Tl'xas, are announcing the birth of a
daught~&gt;r, Melanie Rae, Dec. 31.
The Infant Wl'lghl'd seven ponds,
three ounces. They have a son, JeH,
age 3.
Materna I grandparents are
Buddy and Peggy Harrell. and
Mary Francis Harrell, all ltCorpo.is
Christi, Texas; a maternal great·
grandmothl'r, Jessie Mae Nelson,
Houston, Tl)xas; and a maternal
great-great -grandmother, Ada
Conroy. Edinburgh, Scotland, who
Is visiting In Corpus Christl.
Paternal gi-andmotoor 1s Agnes
Dixon, Pomeroy, and too late
Herbert ptxon. The baby was born
on.th!' birthday annlvE&gt;rsarlesot her
mother, Suzy, and hl'r grand·
·, mother, Peggy Harrell.

Service Station
OPEN 7 DAYS A Wt:EK
6 A.M. TO 11 P.M.
PHONE 614·992·9932

There are dmet when over•the .. counte.r remcdir:• can serve your
heahh ntedl. Plea~e feel free to uk our pharmaci51 about our
telecdon of non•prnc::ripdon product• that are readily avail·

_________
___ ,_..,

..

able. We are profeoolonalo who care about.__
your 1ood health.
I

SWISHER LOHSE

I

Pharmacy

I

I

----...J
l

I

,,.,.. lct1141HIIl.l.l'lt.
tllorlfs atrllo, ' ·''
liiOIIId Monnin~ Uh.
•
I on. Utru lot. 1:00 u . to! •·•·
I
SuMay 10:30 1.m. to 11 30 p.m. 1nd • h&lt; I P "'PRISCIIPIIONI
PH. !92·2911

I

loll
• 1o1ft St.

.

and family, Mrs. Pauline At!pns ,
Mrs. Sharon Jewell and Chl'ryl.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Owen, Altiany
were Sunday t;Jt'Sts It Mr. and Mrs.
Doug Blsoop.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Alll'n Gibson :and
sons of Col., were weekend visitors
of Mrs. Virginia Gibson.
•
Mr. and Mrs. RaySalserofSitade
viSited Mrs. Lola Clark MoDctay
evening.

.•

PHONE 992-2156

Rood, Rk:hootor, Mlchi· rgon 48064 - appontod
Executor of the llll.lto of V"oo·
lot Smith.
tote of R.
D. Roedovllle. Ohio 4&amp;n2.
Robert E. Buell .
Pooblta Judge
Lena K. Nooootrood, Ctorll
(12) 20, 27: 1113

deal-.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice lo hartby glvon
thet on Seturdly, Jln·

Savings Company, Pom ·
eroy. Ohio, ruervea the
right to bid It this .....
and to
withdrew the
above collateral prior to

uto. Furtheo. tho Farm·

era Bank and Sevinga
Company

raMrvte the

right to rt)oct any
bido oubmi1ttd.

Of

all

Further, the automo·

biloo wilt bo ootd in 1he
condition they are in with
no expreiHd or implied
warrantiea g~en .

1121 31 : 111 2. 3. 3tc
165-1180

Real Estate General

. REAL ESTATE .

flilfldly Strritt

''"''"· o,.• II
Opoo lilfrt• IHI I
~---~--------- ------ · -

toto of the VitlogO of Middll·
port. Molgo County, Ohio.
Robert E. Buck ,
. Probate Judge

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

ward S. Ebersbach. Jr .• 17

54297 New Portland Road,

Ple11sant Lee Drive S .E ., Ne-

Portand. Ohio 46770 . ·

On December 16. 1985,
in the Meig1 County Probate

IHE
IIOUNTRY
KlUB· f
.':- i

GoH

SALES &amp;SERVICE
U. S. AT. 50 EAST

Now Gripo loci • I SUO -.
ONtp Golf ....... $6.00 Dol.
•Ntw • Prior Owntd Clu._
•Cutto_f' Clubs
V~Ckrbo

•lho• •Trophln
•Repair

JOHN TEAFOID

c........ -12·

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deere,
New Holltnd, Blish Hoc
hr111 Equiplltnl
.
Dealer · .

ftr• E~•l~•••l
Ptrtc &amp; Serflee

.

INSIDE YARD SALE

WE HAUL- BIG OR SMALL
PICK UP WEEKLY
Rtatonlblt Alt•- Atlllbll

on•

- Add
•nd r•modellng
- Roofing .,d guHer wort

- Concnt• wort
- Plumbing •nd tteetrical
worl&lt;
jFree Ettimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-UU
PDmtroy, Ohio

12·8·tlc

Pro bate Judge
lena K. Nesselroad , Clerk

(12) 20.27:1113

•Hawo Your

Anninnary or SpecKII
Occation 111 Yioloo•••Wo
Tap• Any S,tciol Occositn.

(CUT OUT 101 IUIUII USE)

Roger Hysell
Garage :

CHAILES BAILEY ·
PH. 742-2050 ·

11·21-l mo .
·"

12-4-B! 1 mo .

loshan Building

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

915-3561
All M1ki1

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

'

•Washers •Dilhw11hers

6:30P.M.
Fattory Choke
12 Gau1e Shotcuns Only
9-30-tf

W..W~

Down from Rutland Post
Office. will be runnin1 until
after Christmas. New &amp;
used lays, somethinl tor
the whole family, dolls ,
tools, novelties. etc.

GUN SHOOT

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Robert E. l(pd&lt;,

~--------t--------

JOHN C. EBLIN
GABAGE SERVICE
II. 2, Cool•il•
915·4119

UNG'S

1·3·11c

·I mo.

pointed Executor of the estate of Ho·ward S. Ebersbach , Sr., deceaaad . late of

ll·Zl·l mo.

BOGGS

·

Eqtipmtnt

wark , Ohio 43055. was ap-

t--------.. .

Business Services

•Complete Remodelin&amp;
*Room Additions
eRoofina
•Sid in&amp;

....
Contracting

. Buildin&amp;s

MliCUM
.CONTIACnNG
Lottt hH1111, Ohie
Ph. 915-4141
Fr" Eotimetea

9·11· 1 mo.

Sius Start From 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up

to 24'x36'

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

. Rltine. Oh.
Ph. 614-843·5191
10·6-tfc

SPUT li.VR HOOSE with 3
be«tooms, 2 ~· ~.
lliniiiJTOOIO, livin&amp; 1'00111 and

lqe ttallllon room. ID. tiled on -8 aues. llr• 111111
pond. Racine ••·
3 BEOROOIIIIOBllE HOllE
on 3 lots in Syracua.
OLDER HOUSE with 3 bed·
rooms on corn11 rot in Syr. cuse.

AUTOMAnC
TRANSMISSION
OVERHAUL
AIL .,_IICAN UDI
CAl$.&amp; TIUCIJ
•TRANSF!R CAlfS•
oTORQUE CONVERTOR I•
•USEO - REIUILT

w.,...

TRANSMISSIONS•

HOME NATIONAL

BANK

949·221'0

,,.

CIRCLE
CONTIACnNG

Autll-'lc
I
hi Oftftla..

lt. 2, ""lot, 011.
614-379·

30°/o
to 50°/o Off ..
·
NO , , , . , nu APIIl ·

OLD
TIMEmlletHEATING
CO.
. RT.
Gelllpollo
DARK

S.nice

(Free Estimates)

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.
long lottom. Ohio

PH. 949-2649
11· 12· 11110.

THE QUAUTY
PIINT SHOP
Ftt All 'lltlltJ fl*
'lUS:

y,,

OHke~l

fumiture. W.......
an•Gr...till
!lotioo:a;.,
$igM. I
St..,.,
lvsirl•t ,.,.....
COfiY S••iat. ltc.

.....,ic

!SS M St., lit' pllt

104......, h, ,_.,
. 992~334~12/tln

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL ·
JUST CALL!

.992 ~34-10· ' '

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND

' TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

10-l·lft

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

THE HAT lACK

WiliNG NEEDS

CROCHETEP
HATS ·1[11 '(OUR COLORS
Many Other Craftt
Availlblt
992-5731 •.
12-5·1 mo.

FOI All YOUII

Ruldllttial &amp; CoRtmttrciall.l

Call:
~92.5175

742-31

Or

J&amp;F

r

Cemplttt lulltllng

•Garaces &amp; Pole

FOR SALE

STOVES-FIREPLACE INSERTS
WOODBURNING FURNACES

OPEN 10

Public Notice

•Range~

•Refrigerators
•Dryers •FrHzers

PARTS and SERVICE

Rt. 124.Potnlloy Ohit

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR .:
AIn Tr111MI11Iot
PH. 992-5612

ar 992·71213·24-tlc

HHc

... The flrmers Bank and

KINDLEWOOD

7-·

Public Notice

,,
Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

viow

Over..the . . Counter Remedies

..__ _ _ ,

Christmas with Ray Alkire In Col.,
also v1Sltlng werl' Mr. and Mrs.
James Hewitt , Col.
Christmas visitors of Mrs. Stella .
Atkins and Miss Ruby Diehl were
Mrs. Mildred Alkire, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Alkire arid family, Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Stanley and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Ronnie Wilt and family,
Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. David
Ray Riggs, Col .. Mrs. Gloria Riggs

lena K. Netsalroad, Clerk
1he Moigo Coonty Proboto
112) 20. 27: 111 3tc
Court. Case No. 24983. Ho·
Court. Cue No. 24982, Do·
'WI G. Smith, 1595 Grand· .__ _ _ _ _ _ _......_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

COMPLETE

"ff!Yrd rPfrPShmrnts

SAJ.E M CENTER - Star
Granw m""t s Sa tu rday a1 8 p.m..
Crangr hai L

MOORMAN FEED
BUSINESS .
OPPORTUNITY
Ntlionally·known manu·
facturer needs local sales
and seniceuaresentatlve.
On-the-job traininc. Would
prtler person who has
taised limtock or been in
our businm. llust have
cood reputation and credit
ratina. For confidontial iti·
terview send usumeto Box
II c/o The Daily Sontinel,
Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio.

Battery Sale

Sending gift s werr Shirley Gibbs
:md Matrclla Chapman. Mrs. Kelly

s.\TURDA\'

FIDUCIARY

NOTICE OF
Coort. CO.. No. 24969. Fntd
APPOINTMENT OF
W. Coow. P.O. Boo 486. PoFIDUCIARY
meroy, Ohio, 46769 Wll OP·
On December 16, 1986, in pointed Executor of t!)O OOlite
the Moiao Coumv Probate ~I Ruth L. Mug, clocooood.

Insulated Doc Houses

P :nn HoHman a nd Barbara Pooler .

Rock Sp1i ngs Grange host.

~NOTICE OF
"'~~OINTMENT

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

uary 4th, 1988. ot 10:00
o.m., a public ull will bo
'held at 10&amp; Union
Avonuo. Pomaooy. Ohio
.to ooll for cuh the lot·
lowing collateral:
1978 CHEVY Mollbu
1W27M8KB817 37
1978 DODGE- S.riltt
No . XP22K8R127997
1979 MERCURY - 2
Dr. HT. Mlr'o sorlol no .
9H93R820478 Coogor

-~

FRIDAY
, MIDDLEPORT - Middlepot1
· Lodge 363 F"&amp;AM ml'!'t s Frida)&lt;. 7
p.m., work in !ellowrra!t degrrr .
: All members a['(' asked to a I lend.

!/JiA7A/JS

The annual Harrisonville Grange
dinner was hl'ld Sat. evening at the
home of Mrs. Stella Atkins and Miss
Ruby Diehl.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Gibson and
, Gay Lynn spent Wed. through Sat.
with Mark Gibson, Rockville MD.
Miss Barbara Sleple of Ind.,
visited a few days with her aunt
Mrs. Frances Young.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire spent

•

will bo hold at tho oHice

!Ni . .June &amp;arbs and Stephanie.
Maxmc .Jordan. Ta mmy CaPfhart.
Cinclv ,\rikrr. F.lil.aheth Milton.
Hrlrn Combs. Rit a Chapman .
Shl'IIY Arnold. Shervl Lamhert.
Joann FrttY . Margarrl Johnson.
.Jrnrll Barker. Lou Hutchirt&lt;On.

Harrisonville
happenings

AHAPPY CAPER FOR CARPER: Rep. Thomas Carper, D·Del., .
married a Du Pont Co. marketing employee in lhl' first minutes of .
the New .Year. Following the candlelit Presbyterian ceremony, the .
joyful couple jetted off to Jamaica for their honeymoon.
:
It was the second marriage for Carper, tiny Delaware's only :
congressman, and the first tor MartbaStacy, 36, of Wilmington. The ·
pair met on an arranged date while tre two-term Democrat was ·
attending a Democratic Party function In West VIrginia last
summer.

Or Write Oailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

that the annual meeting
of the stockholders of

Mr. and Mrs. Gary Gregory,
Tuwers. Plains, announce till' birth
d a daughter, Amanda Christine,
Nov. 29, at O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital, Atll'ns.
Maternal grandparents are Joan
Tunil', Racine. and Milton and
Ruth Tuttle, Pomeroy. Maternal
great-grandmothl'r is Gaynelle

as

The Paily Sentinel

(.

Notice it hereby given ..

and Clint McPherson, Coolville.
Group singing was led by Marjorie Malon!', Coolville, followed
by treats for the children. An of.
lerlng was taken for needy lam-

BALlET ON ITS KNEES: More trouble for till' financially
troubled and artistically shaky American Ballet Theater. Rorert La
F0811e, Its principal male dancer, recently anno~nced that he has
asked tor_and has been granted a releaSI' from his contract for the .
198!}.86 season, sa)61ng he wanted to pursue otll'r artistic endeavors.::
Mikhail Baryshnlkov, artistic director of ABT, said he r'egretted .
La Fosse's decision to ll'ave th!' rompany but wished till' dancer the
best. La Fosse joined ABT in l!m and has been its number onl' '·
footster since 19&amp;1 In addition to his ballet work , he took the read.:
male role in the Broadway musical, "Dancin' ," and has made TV:
commercials for Pepsi Cola and Dr. Pepper.
•

A NO.NUNst;NSE PROPOSll'ION: Italian tenor Luciano
Pav&amp;I'IIUI had 25 nuns, ritonks and prtests his Invited guests wh!'n
he performed New Year's Eve at the Worcester Centrum InWorcester , Mass. Four sisters from till' Slaves of the Immaculate
Heart of Mary Convent watched Pavarottl rehearse earlier In the
week.
Afterward, Ill!' renowned singer told the nuns to return for lhl'
pertormance and bring the rest of the sisters at the convent with
them. Priests and brothers of till' order went In place It some It till'
nuns, who had the nu.·
THE HAIR ALSO RilES~ Ernest Bemlngwa.v had a hair fetish
and consldl'red hair more arousing than' any othl'r feature,
according to an article In the February issue of Forum Magazine.
Many of Hemingway's stories and all d his lmporlanl oovels Include
elaborate descriptions of hair.
In fact. the author. according to till' article, encouraged his wives
to dye their tresses and change their bair styles. Sometimes
Hemingway had his fictional Cemale lovers cut their hair the same
length as the man's so trey could exchange sexual roles and merge
thl'lr personal Identities. And now yoo know.

I

-

LEGAL NOTICE

new members were Der.lk Weln·
brenner. Reedsville: Amy and
Thomas Tanya . Akron; Jennifer
Bigley, Joshua Bigley, Jl'ffrey
Dotson . Tony McPherson Jr ..

By EIJ.Il E. CONKLIN

Unifed Prais lnlema&amp;nal

Winners In till' annual Middleport . gious; and ·Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Christmas lighting · contest SPQII· Strauss, Third St., entranceway.
sored by till' .Middleport Garden
Honorable mentions wet!' also
Club and till' Middleport Amateur givl'n to Sears, Rawlings-Coats·
Club have been announced.
Blower Funeral Home 81\9 till'
Till' winners are Mr. and Mrs. Middleport First Baptist Church.
Bernard Fultz, Falrlane Drive,
Judging by Mrs. Eva Robson,
l'nttanceway; Mr. and Mrs. Geroge Rutland Garden Club, . and Mrs.
Hackett, SI'VenthSt., religious; and Addalou Lewis, Winging Trail
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cook, Grant Garden ·Club, took place Friday
Street, best oxeraiL. Each received evening. Till' judges were driven
a gift of money .
around town by Mrs. Nancy Hill
Honorable mentions went to Mr. and Mrs. DorothY Morris It the host
and Mrs. Lee Wllliams, Dew Street, club after which Ire judges and till'
and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Fisher, committees met at the LaSalle lor
Second St., overall; Mr. and Mrs. dessert and coffee. Gilts w:.ere
· · Bob Byer, Falrlane Drivl', reli· presented to the Judges.

Public Notice

HONORED ..,. Marlene Dooovaa, Alfred, Modern Woodmen ol America, Camp 101110, presents
"Athens C..Unty: Canha«e, Rome, and Tnly To-·
ships with Family Notes," by Mrs. C. M. (Elizabeth
Y.) Burdehe, 1o Ray Sldnner, pre!lldent, Athens
County Historical Society and MU!Iellm. Anthony
Sarp!nU, ACHS 'l'reaAurer, AmesvWe, holds a

tlan service, problem soMng and
learning about Christ. Steve and
Wanda Shuler are lhl' advisors for
lhe Baptist Youth Fellowship program to which all young people d.
the community are Invited. Further
Information may be obtahted by
calling the advisors, 247-3494.

Contest. winners named

Woodmen honor
genealogist,
historian
Camp 1900, Modern Woodmen of
America. honored Mrs. C. M.
1Elizabeth Yagala l Burdette, Cool·
ville and Akron geneaiogtst·hlsto·
rlan, for "conscientious and ded·
kated community service," related to the recording and preser·
vation of local history. Her 1973 pu blication, Atil'ns County, Ohio
t Carthage, Rome and Troy Town·
shlpsl 1850 Center and Family
Notes, is to be dE'posited In tre
g&lt;&gt;nealogy llbracy at Athens County
Htstortcal Society-Museum, alo~
with hl'r copies of: (Cemetery Ins·
crittons for CarttMlge, Troy and
Rome Township (W. E. Pl'ters);
Vtrgnta/West VIrginia Census and
Wills: Jackson Coonty, w. Va. His·
torlcal Society Journals (1967-llll:
West Augusta Society Newsletters,
Wood Coonty, W. Va.; and Wood
Carvings by hl'r uncle, Charles
Maxon of Coolville.
Mrs. Burdette. national regis ·
trar for Children o! th!' American
Colonists . a member of Minear
Chapter of Eastl'rn Star Lodge;
Dau ghtl'rs of the American Re·
volutlo n, Dames of the Court of
Honor. and Thl' Huguenot Society. has previously put her pu·
blicatlons In th!' Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.; Ohio
Slate Archives; and major reference libraries such as Rich·
mond, Va .; Chica go and San
Francisco Arch ives.
At the service In her honor , the
Woodmen Pledge was led by Ro·
bert Pullins and Paul McPhl'f ·
son, Coolvlle, and Bl'tty Dunfee.
Llttll' Hocking . Welcomed as

'

·•·

Meigs County

Ledford.
and June Wyatt wl're guests of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Bailey. and Mrs. Chuck Mullffi and son.
Pensacola, Fla . spent ChriStmas
Mr. and Mrs. James Fry, Ruth
here visiting relatives. On Chris1· -and Sue, Nina Craddock and
mas Eve thl'y were guests of Matthew, Jame Bush, and till' Rev.
Brenda Hysell-, oons. Scott and William Mlddleswarth sP.,nt
Todd. Othl'rs joining till' famlly Christmas with Mr. arid Mrs.
were Debbie and lan ,Mullen, Mr. Edward Stiles, Middleport. Also
and Mrs. Harry Hysell, and visiting during till' day were Rogl'r
Tammy Gilkey. On Christmas Day and Linda Stiles of Pickerington.
till' fal!'lly joined by Kay Vujakllja a!!d Harry and Delores Surface &lt;1

Church auxiliary conducts party
The Full GosJX•I Li gltthouS&lt;·
Ladies Auxiliary recm tl,l' hosted a
bridal showrr for Mtchellr fl&lt;&gt;arhs.
bride-elect of Stone\ Johnson. at I hr
hom~ of Ill!' Rev . and Mrs. Thomas
Kelly. Middleport ..
• Games were play.ed with prilr•s
going to Maxine Jord an. Mirhrlir
Bearhs and June 8&lt;-arhs. Thr door

Joe Hall.
ChrlstmasguestsltMr,andMrs.
Rorert Russen were Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Sumrnerfleld, Candl, Wffidy
and Crystal of Medina, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Haggy. Stephanie and Brad,
a~d Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell.
Mandy and Mlcha~&gt;l.

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

Kickoff planned for Sunday

The Daily Sentinel

OPEN TIIUISN Y
nfliiiUliJAY

AI

IU .-:1ST.
PO.IOY

CONTRACTING
DOZER. BACKHOE,
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER,
~AS 6 SEWER LtNES.
RECLAMATION, PONDS.
SPRING OEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
e. DIRT

JIM CLIFFORD
PH.

992·1201

'VINYL SIDING
'AlUIMtUM SIDING

Rf~DIATOR

ERVICE

Middlljlllrl, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Also Carry .
Fishing Supplies.

PAT HILL FORD

IU$111DS P'IIONI
16141 "2-6550

992-2196

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

RENT A CAR
CALL
446·4522

"lr• R11t F11 lm"

0

A~fXE

Worked in home •re•
20 ye1r1

RENT~Lert~

"froo Eotimateo"
CAll (0U£CT:

Ph. (6141143·5425

ll-12·2 ....

1/11/IIR

St. Rt. 160

O•lllpella, •I•

..

-

2 LOCAnONS
1!II Vint St.
GallipDiis

, , • , , Rutlalld

SHADE, OHIO
· Anything that has to
do with a mollilo
homt. No jail too sn~ll
or too big. Wt do .,
Setups and .
Untltrpinning. ..
"Spacial htes lor
Senior Clli•M" ·
PHONE (6141 992-6100

ELUM
REST HOME:

tl'rn;..ty Iutton~ 1111 H-)

674 Plum St.
Middleport
.
•Tender Loving Care
•Senior Citizen a
·
•Oiaabled
•24 Hour Care

CAU JOE lOWlAND

. 992-3595 .

12!!0/ 1 1110.

7/ll / ttn

THE TAXIDERMY SHOP.
New lima Rd.

Repair Service

12·10·111 ....

EUGENE LONG

VIIITL &amp;,AW.IIUM
Comploto Gutter Work
Complete Romoctollnu
Roofing of oil Typeo

"Free Eltlniatea"
PH. 949·2101
or U9·2160
Na Sunday Ccills

317 North Second

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tlc

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

New HDIIIIS luilt

PLUMBING &amp;
HEAnNG

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

'llOWN IN

INSUlATION

B&amp;D Mobile HOlM

"iz

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearil1£ Evaluations For All Ages

USA M. KOCH, M.S. ,

446-9244
9:00 A.M. • 6:00 P.M. .......y·Satvrday

:i

Ucensed

Ha" Your Trophy Mounted ly A
Full Tl1111 Ta•ldermltt

!

(614) 446.7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

742-222$ Dr 742-2771

c,_,,,

Q11fl1g, Not Ptld'

Clinical Audiologist

%

I · I! tift •

't B'LUE STIEAI CAB 0~.CO~"i
PHONE 992-7075
.
l11tl11 All Of
.f
t NowMtlgt
CoQntg '
·.t. . . 1nd Su~toulldlllt·1
L · -. 8/19/~'! J
107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy,

�•
'

OhiO

Sentinel
9

Business
Services

.,

350 •otnefOr 71 Chtvy ~Mckup

uuc:ll. »4-171·21H -

CUNIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PLUSANT OFFICI

t' ,,

SMAU ANIMAL HOUIS

..
,,I

.'

1

71 food F-100, AM-fM i trock1

""'"' upotoln opt..
khch... noo mo.

piUI Ulifttlel, 231 111. A¥1 . Ret.

4 rlldlal tW.. , new exh-..1\
IYIIetn , new b.tt.,..,, runs 1t..
tookl good . Clll I to 10 PM.:.

Uzt.

114-441-4412 .

F... opt. t20 4111 A....
Cloitlololll. ......... 1210, ..Ill.
liM lfOid,ld~ C.N 4411-'\;411
lh•7PM.
. ·

lift ldt, niW 31 Gumbo '1, 11Wing
bid&amp; t1•11. many extru. uklng'

Apt.' fO, Nnt in Hendenon. WV,

Ono1812 fO&lt;d 4-WD , 811. bod,•
olondonl• • , .... onglno. ll,too.

THAT STILL G IV E S US

AlMOST

HA~f AN~

"'TO FIND TH~ B::IMB1 "

' TRACY SAYS ·

.

1ti0Chevyob4310 ...... 41n ~

fi.IOO. C.M 114-241·1407.
...........

t121 rioa. Col 114-41-1112.

Govemmtnt Joba 111,040·
e59,230 yr. Now hiring , C.l
101·887-1000 Ext. A412 fo&lt;
current fldtrll lilt.

'

Trucks fci~ Sale ·

72

• dop. nO 11011- Call 114-441-

-j
. ~ ....

1/~~~~~=
J./

305 Jackson be.

KIT''N' CARLYLI! i!bJ L.llrry Wright

tum-·

I IIIPI.·vn~t·l''

Sl' r ~w 11

I

.

3, 1986

Apilrtmtnt
for Rent

urvo

'

--------------~ -•-_m_.------------TOWN &amp; COUN11Y
VEniiNAIIAJI

44

LAFF-A-DAY

Wanted To Buy

'

One 1877 OMC 1&amp;00 Mri• 1B

«.. do""
'2132 .

New onebdr. effioiMC¥ _. , Cd

114-441.0310.

bod. Collvl14-448-

Mon.-Wod••Thun. 3·5 pm

THI ~ K

DC '10U

·,..,, 6:30-8, Fri. 1· 2 pm
Satunloy 10·11 :30 LAIGE ANIMAL &amp;
SUIGEIY IT APPT.

~ HOUL D

WE-

TRU S&gt;T

THEM A ROUND
r ~E- JE E P~

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AREA CAU
Ripley Office
For Hours

304-372-5

Fir.wood t40

31

Homes for Sale

Llrge houM •nd apwtment.
untumiahed. 304-1715-1315.

Oo.,..,.,...t Hon• from .,
IU--Io}. A1oo dollq-1 w
,......... Col 801-IS7-IOOO
Ext. GH-4112 fo&lt; lnfo&lt;molion.

33.a2.

Announcemen ts
3

Announcements

WANTEO :ExpMienctd Produce
mlr'legtt. No leu thtn 3 Y'H"'

experience. Good pay • Mnef·
its. S~nd ,..,. m. to The O.ify
Sentinel, Bx.n9 c .
Governmtnt jobt 111.040·

t&amp;l,230. hlolnil. COII05·
SWEE PER and saw ing machine 6'7-1000, ut. R-9101 1o&lt;
repair . parts. 111nd t upplies . Pick current W~~n~l li11.
up 11nd delivery . Davia Vacuum
Cleener . one ha lt m ile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call I 14·
44 6 -0294 .

Radn11 Gun Shoot apon.ar.t by
R1cine Gun C lub. E wry Sunday ,
begin ning at 1 :00 p.m . F1c tory

Choke 12 gu age t ho t; una .
No Hunt ing or trespauing .
Pickens Farm t t Flatrock. All
previout permiuion c.nceUed .
P1ul A. Plchent.

4

Giveaway

Attention

R . N . ' a tnd
LP .N.' a:PoiMfOy Hllfth Care
Center Ia ~CC~~Pt6ng l!pPicatlont
for atw.n to e.qn lhtft nu,...
who .. )o¥ worldni In long term
eere. beeflent blnllfib. ttl..,
conwnenturlte wittl aru. OnlY
tttoae nu,... who entov tne
profenion need -..ty. Applk:•
tiona ac:cepted through Jan. 10.

E.O.E.

Senltlrian potition • • tn the
Otllitl County HNidl Depart·
ment. Experienw in En¥4ron·
rnM .. ISanitationpref.,ed. A.I '

5 ptn puppi .. , 8 W""l Old . Call
61 4-388 -8180.
JO chickens 1nd 1turlt ey to give
awav 61 4-992 ·6350 .

2 pupp iet 10 givt aw ay . Austr~l ­
ian Blue Heel er and 1. 6,.·· 99 27253

lost a nd Found

45780.

Black &amp; tan Gordon
Setter Si n ce Ctu ium u .
Rodney -Bidwell Fld a rN . Please
call 614 -24 5 -9375
lOST

LOST :male bro wn G erm~~n She·
phard and alto 1 black Doberman . If fou nd daMJ or alive,
plet te call 6 14 -36 7 -7191 Fi t ·
ward a ttarlld

Lo tt : Very friend lv black , brown
and white mtla dog with blue
evM Jericho Ad 30 4 -87 5-

7446

Part Siamese male cat . Body
creamy . rest striped . Blue ayea
Greer Fld RlMitrdl 30 4 -87 52169
•

Ya rd Sale

Situations
Wanted

Vtcancy for ttlt elderly in our
ho~ . T,.in.t ll1d

u ptlit nce
7 314 .

ffft:een y••n
Ctll 11 4 · 992 ·

PaopJu S.C::urity Uit h11 an
sgency optnlng In the Pl.
PINttnt ·OIUipalit Af'M. UnNm·
ittd ttmlngt . Fringt b«''lflta.
Co fT1Jtn¥ training and mtneg•
m..-.t opportvntt.... CeO )04.

736-2491 . 8o30·UO EOE.

21

Business
Opportunity

Mo11ing S!llle king tirfl w aterhfld
w ith baffle, bunka bedt. Ca ll

614 -446 -96215 '

I NO TICE I

THE OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO recornmenda thtt you
do butlnflt wtth peop .. VO\I
know, end NOT to Hnd mont¥

Public Sale
·&amp;Auc tion

through ,.,_ mtil untl! you .,.,.
lnvndgtt_. the offering .

RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEE R
SERVICE Esl !llta, farm . an tiqu e.
liqu1dahon sales Ucen aed Ohio
and West Virginia . 304 -773 -

5785 or 304 -nJ -5430.

To

Bttllty Shop for Mil. Ownttwill
flntnce. Ctll...,aningal14-811·

6635

22 · Money

to Loan

Buy

We pav c aah lor late model cletn
Utfld Cllf I

purpoae. luder Martgeee Co.,

Jim Mink Chi\I .-O klt Inc
Bill Gene Joh n ao n
61 4· 44 8 · 3672
WANTED TO BUY uaed wood&amp;
co11l heaters. SWA IN 'S FU ANI·

lURE . l rd.

~Olive

814-lt2·30e1 .

23

Profe11ionel
Services .

S t. Gallipo-

L.arve charnWng okllf home. ex c.
kx:ation. m1ny potMblhl• 2
llrlt Iota. mid 170's. Cell

304-871-6168.
Ext•riof compltt. · lnt.-kw
f"Ndy to complete. All brick.
enwgy efflo*n, thrM beckoom
Rench• ttntnQ on 1 acre. PrieM~
on i'11p1etion onty. W -875·

2911 .

TOP CAS,H p1id tor '8 3 model

and nvwer used c a rt . S mith

Bui ck-Po,tiec. 19 11

E111em
Ga llipolis. Call B14 ·oM8·

P!tno tuning tnd reptir. tune up
for the holtclavt. ap.c:lll ellacount Ward's Ki1Yboard, 304-

878-1100 .. 175-3124 .

228 2.
a t tootball field . Galllpoli•. Cell

614-448-1607.

'

rings. jewelry, lttf'llng ware, o4d
cain•, large currency. Top prl·
en . Ed. Burkett lerber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 81•·

992-3'4 78.
- - - - - -- - -lcBu ying Raw Fur . Beef end Dt1r

hidaa . Sell ing -trapping aupplltl .
Wheat and nita lltM. OeoraBu c kle j . 51 4 · 114 -4781 .
Hour1:1 :z.g p.m.

..

HOUSES FOR RENT: 111 Wll·

kM lan•. 3 bedroorM, livtni
toom. btth, Ut· in ldtch., with
waah• 1nd dryer hookup) and
c.-port. R~tnter INYI tlectrk: and
WIW. •200 I * month plut

"'r,f'1/lond, 3 bodroo.,., both.
IMrlg

rooM, dlntng room, ktichlft, laundry 100111, and ......

31

Homes for Sale

ly owner. Mud ail-moved. 3
bdr. rtnch, on• CIJ g....t ,
walking dl1tence ftom North

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAUTY
MOilLE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. OALUPOUI, AT 35.
I'HONE 114-441-7274.

3 bedroom houa In Henctw.on.

~.

1M2

14XH, .....,

fum .. wMhw, dryer, AC. under• ....... E... •ond ..

Moko 1ft 011.. Colll14-2681t21 or 814-281·1311.

MOIIILE HOMU MOVED: inlured. I'NIOnablt ,...... Call
304-871-2338
1110 IJbooty 14xl4. 2 "'

unfumiahed, vtnyl undltpen/Mng

lndu4Md. Mu• Sell. 304-773U73.

~6 Lots

&amp; Acreage

lit••-· p-.

HoullllMPinO room. """· ,..

lriQ ..
milo
utilltloo pd. 't 125 . Coli 441U 11 efter 7pm.
·

Lorge loti. C.lll14-tl2 -7471.

Mn l' h ,JniiiSI:

2 bedroom home. 501
... 304·171·7207.

aUntett•

z br houM. 2107 Unootn.
Unfumlthed , ltOYI end r.trlger·
Otor. 304-871-1747.

42

61

tfB.III-modolopon. CoN
114-811-7311 .
Ju11 2Ya mit• off At. 31 in
Meeon County, he. ttunUng •
privacy on tt'lia 133 ecNt.
Adjolnina Cam ltoik lllotoPe&lt;k.
ltldng t37 .000. Mutt
Cel

114-441-0201 · - l o30PM.

AC. clbte. no city
tun, beautiful rtwr view in
Ktnauga. Fottll'l Mobile Home

P..... cou 814-441-1102.

2 bdr. fully fumilhed. 1 2xll5,
conv. locat~ . Upper River Rd ..
wtter ptkl, ·~· dtp. Mquired .

Col 614-446-8158 .

2 bdr .. on Rt. 7.' complet•f¥
tvmltMd , weter p,ekl.
mo., MC. dip. ""uirld. Cell

noo

1h70, 3 bdr., lnC•nt.Mry . Cell

114·441-4292.
12all Winchor furnished , n•
Clfllilt, gaa htlt, Cent: fill tiir,
lloulh lAM in CPiethlr•. C•ll

114· 317·0221 or 114·317 ·
7242.
2 bdr. furnished tr1W. for rent.

Nolghboohoad Ad. Coil 114·
441-4717.

JHOI•

"""fl•. CaM

114-258-1 10.

Fum lah~

t.ou•. 241 Jtckeot'l

Rd .

2 bedroom mobil• home nett
R-o. 814-912-5818 .
10x50 mobile

~rna

for rent .

rtenn..

FMgH,

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sof11 1nd chlin priced from
e2e1. to 1891. Tabltt. 110 ~nd
up tO 11215. Hkle·e-btcls,t390.
end up to 1110., 10fl bedt
e145. Recllntu. U215 . to
e375., Umpe from •21 . to
pc. dintttll
09 ..
10 431. 7 pc. 1189 tfldup . Wood
tabla with tlx ch~rt 1281 to
17o&amp;5. o ... ., 10 up Ia 1221.

from,,

•us.

Hutdl•. 11550 . Bunk IMd com·
plett wid! mattr...... 1275.
end up to 1311 . llby beds.
1110. Ma1tr11eea or bo a
spring•. full or twtn, IU., firm,
t73. end 183 . Outen Mta,
e221. 4 dr . ch•tt. 149. 5 dr.
chetU. 1&amp;9 . led framu .
UO .tnd t25 .. 10 gun . Gun
clblnlb, f3&amp;0 . O.a or Metric
rang• t375. l.eby mtttniMt,
13, I U15. bed frtmt~ UO.
e21. l 130. king frlme 1150.
Good Hltctton of bedroom
auiws . rocll.trt, mtttl clblntta,
hudbotrdt 138 &amp; up to •11.

UMCI FumiNN ·· Oruaer, . bM.
mltll ~ detltl. 3 miltt out
lulavillt Rd. Open lam to lpm,
Mon. thru Sat .

814·441-0322
GOOD USED APPUANCEB

For ren1 wHtt optton to buy. 2 tH

3 bdr., le11JI khthen , nic. utHI1y

t1ll. month. Wtter furnished .
Clll 1ft.,. 4:30p.m. 304-17!-

a

I rooms
Nth. MWty ct.cortt.d. lnqufq It 918 8.eond
Aw .. O•llipolia.

4 roomt a beth, nwttv decorat~ . lnqut,. et 911 Seocond
Av• .• GealpoNt
Yl duplu fM rent . 2 bdr .. :Z miles
from Hotltt, 1 yr. old. CaM

614 -448-lttO "' 614-3712241.
w.lk· ln cedar
cloMt. Kvger CrMk 1chool dit·
3

bdr .

home

Nice 3 bdr. home all krtch~
applltnc... located Stnd•ra
Drive. GtlllpoUe, elOO 1* mo ..
MC. d41P. rtf . requlrld. CaM

114·441-0214.
3 bdr, l 'h mil• JM~et Holt..- on
Rt . 110. tlOO mo .. 11 10 dep..

no lfOII. Coil 814· 318-1713.

b..am.m. In Heu•• ton. no
f1 II moftth. f100 .00

44

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES APMT·
MENTI IEQUOI Hautl"if 0 -Nnltyl monthly rent n.arte at
t111 for 1 Mdroom and t20.\
for 2 bedroom. rt.polit 1200.

f -.

located n.., lprlne Vellev Piau
oncl
poolondColllo TV
1\'tltatM, offici ttours • pottlbtt 10 em to 4 pm.and7 pmtot
P"' • lrlondoy· l'ridolo . Coli ..., 4.
441 -2745 or 1..-v. meuage.
Nlcttv tumlthtd mobMe home,
tH . ept., c.mrtl 16r and h..c In
city, odults only. Colll14 -448-

0331 .
101210. C.H 304-171-5104 0&lt;
304-171-1311 .. 304-171·
7111 .

dopolit. CoM. 304-171· 1 111.

hou.

2 bMtroom
1210 mo. e71
~M . 42 C h i - Rd. C.N
114·441·1340 Of 114·441·
3170.

I room hou... ~ ,..,., In
-Cu-Rof..,_
....... rtlt ............ Coil 114111-:IMI.
.

s....., ltauoo .... iitilhlrtR· A - " - v 4 t b . Coli
114-MJ-1111.

1ppllence~

end TV lltt.

o,_, lAM to IPM . Mon

thru

Sat . 814·441 ·1889. 127 3nl.
AYf. GaUipolla, OH .
Vtii~~Y

Atdecom:M IP1 ·• .2 bdr., 11150

Two bldroom unfu..,.._. wkh

CCH.Wity Applience, Inc. Good

ulld

HIHRood, 304-171-3834

UjJI'teffl unfurTMthed 1pt. , Cit·

potod, oil utiWtloo pold. no
chldren, no ptta. C.l 114-4ot8-

1137.

U.S. 35 W•t. Jadr.eon, Ohio.

Eut..-n, furthtf l'lduattons on
10 • ••1o
- lddl"""ol
· •
platol
.....,lltot
..........
f1 .oo. f2 .00. aomt rarities.

Solo canlilllolng 111N 1·)4-H .
Slop In • - to po. dioOioY o1
hoovy I lloht..........,lno .,..• .
Coiii14-.W.-1822 - · 4:30·
8:30. 0,.. 1111 !loy ......... .

20(1011onoqu....,mco..,._
~ rod Iron lllnd a 1K

whh

KC~~eon.t .

Ilk• ,... t7&amp; . C.M

Fumiturt, ntw &amp; uaed.
L•rv• MCdon of quelltv fumi·

ture . 1211 httarn Ave .,

GtlllpoUa .
Stove ~ Nfrigerator 10lld
wood trlpl• drettlf •nd match·
ing chat. Calll14 -441-7827 .

Broyhill. toft. tov.Hat, ch_.r
tolld otdt wood trim. lroyhltl
lOUd Oil premiN top of ttw line
tHI• . cocktAil, htuoonll. ocqgonel, entlque brnl trim, 2
touchme-tlc antique br•u W.htt.
All 1 ¥Nr old. A- t eac....,t

condHIOn. Coli 304·171-7&amp;18.
Chrom. '~" top dlntnt Mt
•ltf\4 peeNed diMs U7&amp;. O.E.
rt1ri{a.mor lllte nN UOO . lov.
tte11711 . C.tii14-441-79270t
614 - ~78 · 27t8 .

63

Antiques

Chlnt Olblntt

uc. cond . UOO .

Coll114-248-1071 .

Miac. Merchandise

1411.

SewiO ,..-centl Fluh6ng arrow
"ant 12111 Ugtlttcl, non-lf'TOW

•2et. Urtiightld .Ult . CFrw

lottorol}

a.. loc:olly . 11001423-

2128..... 104.

-

new. Hovt·htton pro-

I'MCIIIIIt

~nd

bow. 0 81u•

Fl-ood U5.00 ioolo pick-up

loltd. Hoop ........ occoptOd.

114-742·2418 .
TONY'S OUN REPAIRS, hot dip
rlblutlnQ, all typta of gun1nMth
wortc, flit Mrvica, 304-111·

doyof,--

ploto........,,oloOrpot,wooll•.
a AC. Dop.
-INd. Coli dOWI 114·441·
uu. - - • - - 114·
441.013t.

-ion

S.E. Ohio.

3 ,000 Fotd dltlettractcw. 4 new
*-· U .lll firm. I h . Intern•
btooll flog Ull. 8 fl. Fonl
hoovy duty ....... - · t160.
Cel 11 4· 2BI·1122.

-.r
63

P~lld

Hay

I.

AMaMe, orct.ard gr111 hlv· 1st.
2nd. 3rd. Cunlng by 1111• belt or
tftlclt~ad . c ..l814-211·11315 .

,

&amp;

Campers

Trucll •camp• top, flttll ft. b.d.
111ndt owrcab, exccond. mult
... to apprtcittt. 1300.00.

Ott Myendaifalfton:h..-d vran
miXed My, C.III1.\·H7-1114.

Hay for Ilia. Eaclilent quelily.
U..O round boloo. 120. • 125 .
810·742-21177.

forever'

81

clover. IIVIntyftv.CifltUbtlt.
Mlxtd gr ... hty for .... e14.

Trdllollllrl.ll lllll

71

Autos for Sale

Coll114-448-0214.

175-1743.

Mult_,., ~Mil ,_..
ptdr.lat for 1150 Of pert out.
Colll14-378-2130.

Moto lkt 250 Ski doo lftOW
mobil•. 1425.00 . 304·182-

1111 AMC Concord OL tuto.
good lhopo. Ailing 11 ,100. COil

3-1115

vlnvt" iiding. t1orm doora er\CI

DfiiLUNO
Pump ..... •rvi01. Rttllteflld
In OhkJ. An work gu.rtntNd.
Call · 304-273-2111 . Rlftftt·
wood . W. Vo.

T•levl•lon ServiCe .
Hou• edt on RCA. Ouu1r,
OE. Sp.ciallng in Zenith . Ctll

30•· 871-2398 "' 114·4•1 ·
2414.

-a

675 -2088 .. 675-7318 .
Starkll T,.. end Lawn SMYice, ·
landscaping. 304-1171-2010 .

r. (1)
€1)

Plumbing
Heating
8 :30

.

t.._ Rio Grlftdo, 0 . Call 814·
2.a-1121 .

t.v .....

K.,1Ut:ky Lu..... Ohio
.Ohio S10kw.
or dtiNwy.

vn

....... ""' bulkllnt
mo10rlol. Clollipollo lio'* Co..
l'lno lt., Olllllpolla. Ohio Col
814·441·2713.
lloc*. briok. morter end me·

..,a.. Mountatn

lte'lt
lloc* . Rt. 33, N. . Hewn, W.

door""""'-·

cyl .. 4owner
- ·.
E.C., loaded . 4On•
t3100. CoM 114·182· 7422 .

1111 Thunderbird. 4 door .
ehape,

f2,000.00. f -E Ferauton ttacIOo t1.100.00. 304-1 78-4478.

1174 Oton T- 11.000 mH•.
IIUto. olr, 304-178-liH.

'71 O...,o Omnl, AC, ~1. Pl.
87,000 n .200.oo "'

mae MIIIOftlibll ofttr. 304-

112· 3111.
'83 Camero Z21. loaded.

Pita for Sele

Trucks for Sale

nto. •

For .... Ford pldlup . 11 bed.

model Hondo 210 Bit
Rid, t1 ,200 . ' CoM 114-311·
1101.

lrttllloh lu~

· Coli

roo

14-141'

1171 Dodto 0-100 lhoot bod,
new toPPtr. 1uto,
U ,4tl. Jolln't Auto 1olM.
lui....Mo Ad., Clolllpotlo.
MW • •·

._,

1311 .

' '

.•
· ']

~~
CO\

' ,
()) Enllrtllnment To9 ight '

Interview with L il l Bonet ~~ , ~
of the hit TV a·etle~'T'he
--......
Cooby Show·.
(I) Wh.-t ofFdt!une
9:30
11)
'(I) !OGI&gt;nd CI\Y TV ,
· (JJ Eyewltnne Newt ·
....,
(fil MecNeU ·Le,h~Ne_.h.
our
.. ·

Excavating

a

'""

·· '
.. --~-· , 4 ~
7·05 (I) Mary Tyler Moore . ..;__../ •
7;30 •
(I) New Newl.,wed
t
•

,,

8

8,.6;--;:;==Y'i==General Hauling

Divorce
J•fftraona

(]) Stltewlde
(fi) GrNt Performa,ncet: ·
On the Raul• (CC) This
performe nce. by t he British
Natio nel Theatre is baaed
on the same play that in -

spired 'Hello, Dqlly' and
'THe Matchmaker'. (2 hn .)
CIJ III C))) Bonoon .(CCI The
paooing of Halley'• Comet
inspi res Kraus to dreatn
that she an~ -~fnson 1re
the Ia at two "-" Ia leh on

....

10:00 D CD Cil Miami Vlco
Crockett and Tubbs bocorrf'e involved in thfl 111 nti~"
of an ex.cop who is cor\
rectly pred icting mob s lav·
1B WKRP In Cl~ql nnell ,..
ing1. (60 min.) (R), In
7:31 Cl) Binford ond Son '" .
Stereo. ·
K '-h1~ A1
Cil lll i!Z OurFomllyHonO&lt;
• ""~
Boo
:
~ '-'-' n,.
.,.
(CCI Port 2 ol2 Fronk'• of·
, • Mlc; hael and hie I ~lime
fo
•ugle reoull
10 orre'ot ~
.
love pion their wedding.
·'
the mastermind behind a
~ ~
In
le'l death and Frank
•
charged
b rea k•In vowa to e I.111;1 1na t fl •1
~
• min.) with mur160
h im. (BD min.) In S1oreo
r
.,.
Cll Dorio Doy'o • Beat
®Falcon Cr.lt CCCI
Frl•ndt
her Chrl atopher ·moves
(!) ~lahln' Hole
I o the man• ion . while An·
(J) Ill 9 Wobotor (C CI•
'tl
gola tell• Lance that hl o ln·
Wtbltt1's . anemP!I , :?to·
herltence will be affected if
• mike fr iend• with 111 un.tnd' ~
~
Chrl1topher. · 1uvet the
sually tail clastm1181f're re- .~
,•
priesthood . (60 min .)
Cll Woohlngton • WH~ In
1ectod by t~e boy.", who ·
doubta Webater'• .l\1otlvilr.::. ·
Review ICC) Paul Duke I•
• •Cil ®Twilight Zotlf , . • • , 'I'
)joined lb
l yl top Wloolhlngllohn

pooto ftllld . Coil l14-281-1141

or 814 ·444-11715 Or 814-445 -

e

7111 .

Ktn 't Water Service. Walls,
clttemt, poolt filled. Phone

614-387-0123 Oo 114 -387 -

7,741 n~t or d-r.

Wauoh' t ~atw SaNtee. Wells,
cittwna, pools. Felt, ttlltbl•
MrYic.. CeH 814-211·,240 or
114· 2&amp;1 · 1 130. Aeuantble

.r

r. . ..

Upholstery

TRISTATE
•
UPHOL8TEAV SHOP
1 113 S.c. Avt.. Glllpolla
114-448 -7133 Of 114 -448 :
1133.

Cl) M.oN.•l~hNr"N~a , · ·

ourna a I

new

.

•

ana VZ ng

•

our
·•• .
weok'o newo.
1
[J1 Wun lngton WMK •i!l ·
• Odd Coo pie
Rovlow lCC) Paul• Ouko 11&gt;'\
(HIO] MOVIE: 'MoM f&lt;pjoined by top
aoh l ~glon
journolio1o
oly.!lng th....,
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Th• Loot
wHk '
:'( •
ltorflghm' iCC)
• l't\ VIE: ' A lllll!,leX'• ' w/ • 10:20 Cil lanlord ond Son
[HIOj OVIE: 'The~fPkll(
\ 10:30 ill To~ Announced
.
Fooo' C) ·
·
·-'
(I) Wolllt!Ht WMk Lou11
IMAlt] MOVIE: 'North ba~
'
Rukoyaor analyze• ' the
lee forty'
~.. : .
.
o ·a with a weekly review
8:01 (I) NIA laek11blll: Mil-·
o1 economic and inve•t·
weukH et Wllhll1gtoi\ ..."
mtnt mattett .

-ncc1

R II M Fumhure MtnufiiCturing
lt. 111. 7, Crown Cl1y, Oh. CoM
8U-218-1470 , coil Ew. 114.

441 · 3431 . Old 6
Uph .. IOrod.

Hill1. (BO min.) (R) .
I]) 700 Club
CD Top Ronk Boxing
Cll lll i!Z Dlft'rent Strokoo
(CCI When Magg ie snd
Phillip 11ove e fight. Sam
end Arnold scheme to
bring them back together.
(R).
8 (J) ® Dolloo (CCI

(JJ Well Strtet Week Louis
Rukeyter analyzes
the
'80's w ith • weekly review
of economic and in vestment meners.

(I) PIHH Don't Eat Delal•• ... ·
~ SpHdwHk
• ,
· "'
(J) Now· Prlco II Righi, • _
CD
(J) Jeopef'Cty
.,...__
(lD Wh. .l of ' Fortun~ ,.
,"'\' ~
• (JJ Prloe Ia Righ' ·
11

Jam" Bo~• Wl1tr llfVIce. Atao

INN News
10:50
Night Trecks In Stereo.
11 :00 U I]) NowoConter
CIJ Man from U.N.C.L.E
CIJ t1) llJI (JJ Ill II! News
(I) Greet Performances:
On the Razzle (CC) This

·e

'-#

1/4/86

Matchma ker'.

In Stere o .

6ltNiM~

([) Johnny Cuh: Rid in the

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Rails
()]) Hou1e fqr All Seuons

(60

ACROSS

'

I Foo&lt;i o r dog
5 Baby
carri age
9 Paramour
1 1 Of the mou n
13 F·oolish

ell Grizzly Ademe

e :05

([) World Championship

Wrtatting

fJIBenny Hill Show
11:30 D C2) CIJ The Tonight

6 o30 U

ill NBC

Nightly News
(I) SportaCenter
Cil Cl) liZ ABC News
Cil NBC News

Show Ton ight's gu ests are
Ti m Conway a nd Ha l li nden. (60 min.} In Stereo.

14 \,u nfusr

(!j) Woodwright'o Sho p ,

7:00

a..

U

I]) Collage Bookotball:
New Orleans at Marshall
I]) Campbell•
@ College Basketball: Kenluc~ et Venderblh
Cil lll Cll Hoo Haw
(J) AmtriCI
Cil MOVIE: 'Dr. Wl1o: Pirate

Swi~ '

8:00

fl) It's a Living
(3) MOVIE: ' Divo rce

of

oxy ~ r n

4 I Mi iiN \

of

sa h•:&lt;~n • an

42 Squamkr
43 J\o)orHhly
40.:Xp4'11SI'
P•· a.~1 nt

44

••I

of 2 W hen Nell is 1Urned
down for a psvchot oQ v i n-

DOWN

ftfl~~ ID~ ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAM E

~ ~ ~J..!:)!.!I •

star
25 F'ormt• r

3 5 Fervent
37 Italian ri\"er
39 Kind

Lad LX'
CD W College Bas ketball:
Ohio State va. Michigan
Cil Glmmo o Break Port 1

Coverage from Lake Piacid , New York . (90 min.)
CIJ ABC Nowo Nlghtllno
12:60 C1J Night Tr•oklln Stereo .
1:00 C1) Wendy and Me
(I) Punln' on tht Hita
® MOVIE: ' A Motter of
Stete I Photo Flnloh'
1:30 I]) FothorKnowoBoot
Cil
Newo
·
IMAXJ MOVIE: ' Until Bep.
tember' (CC)
1:35 IHBO} MOVIE: 'PorodiM'
1:45 lllMOVIE:'BiookDrogono'
2 :00 8 1]) Ill II! Nowo
(]) 700 Club
(]) Mlzdl SportaLook
Cil Dick Clork'o Nltetlmo
2:15 9 CNN HNdline Newa

I F u mhal l
1nfrtu't 1on

by Henri Arnold ano Bob lee

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- He re's hoM· to work it :

Unactamble ihese four Jumbles,

onelttt.-IO NCn SQuare, to torm
rour ordinary words.

·~-=-

FIDUL

I I I

2 :30 CIJ IJtortaCtnter

PGA lohomoo
C)..alc Slicond round covoroge from Nouau. Bl hl·

mil. (2 hrt.J

A XY DLBAAXR
isLONGFELLO W

One letter stands for·another. In thls sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, clc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and fonnalion of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different

..

I rJ

tENGRYT
) I I tX j

CD MOVIE: 'The Come On' ,

· CD Gotto

CRYPToQUOTE
1-3

w"'A'

A P'!,!5C:&gt;N

J

W.H (? CJ\1.1.'5 A
51"AC:O! A :5P'A17E
I'! I" I'I:OIJAII1.'1' A!IO UT
TO 6 1VE '!lOM E ONE •

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p

lc

I I I I

Jumbles: EX ILE

Yeste«Jay's
\'

I Answer.

z

G

G w J M

ge..

MWY H BZI.

II Z G

A H

tof1T~Rj t j EJ~:i~:~z~~:·"~ w
Answer here: A

32 Famous
Indian
36 Adolescent
38 StMtPd

27 Wal l
painting
28 N.Z.

tress&lt;'s
28 Purview
29 ColormJo
Indian
30 ChooSf'
33 Hairdo
~ad Ret
3 4 C hum

IHBOj MOVIE: 'A Soldier's
Story' (CC)
7:30 ill Guno of Will Sonnen
® Jeopardy

shaped rock hiatorv in
1985. (90 min.) In S'tereo.
CIJ Bill Colby Sl'low
(!J World Cup Ski Jumping

24 Corrida

27 Simha's

fiJi Small Wonder

12:30 11 (J) (!) Friday Night Video1: The Year-End Review
Paul Shaffer hosts this look
back at tht events that

23 English
n ver •

3 1 Pic ked
out

t.s wim•s

20 Nami,Livt'

Ch arles'
mate
24 S h ed
26 Patch up

~nib, Solid Goid

tomln111on' .

ell MOVIE: 'Sky Rldltra'

pi{'Ct'

22 1nqu trc

t okes a look 01 b a ts . (60

Ill liZ MOVIE: ' Allen Con-

li ~h

7 Fi re place

23 N ick

Planet'
I]) Wheel of Fortun e
(!j) Newton's f&lt;pple (CC)
The fau lt line in Ca liforn ia
it studie d, then Ira Flatow

of the hit TV aeries ' The
Cosby Show·.
(I) Golden Yeen of Talevi·
slon
IJ] MOVIE: 'Man on 8

5 Denture
6 Carplike

8 Wrl d duck
18 A s i an r ivE'r 10 W1thst.and
19 ( iive up
12 Qurrn (Sp.)
work
17 Ex26 Wrll 2 1 S printed
a.-.pt'rat l'
_plalurOO ,

® CBS News

Cil WKAP in Cincinnati
Ill (J) MOVIE: ' Ruckus'
®I'll Taxi
Ill liZ ABC Nowo Nlghtline
1 1:45 !MAX) MOVIE: ' Now York
Nlg11ta'
t 2:00 I])
t of Groucho
CD Sportollne
CIJ Entertainment Ton"ht
Interview with Lin Bonet

2 Integrity
3 Egg shaped
4 Skin
affli ction

15 - lurk
16 Rest

0 ([) Concern

C!i SportaCon1er

Ill MOVIE: 'Air Foru·
3:10 ' (MAXI MOVIE: 'North . Dol·
1M Forty'
3:11 {HIOl MOVIE: 'lrMkln' 2
Electric Boogoloo'
4 :30 ill MOVIE: 'Cry Vong•
onco'
4 :66 IHIO] Remember Whon:
WI!Mio, W ingo ond Whl•
tin

ma n ager of a rock group.

the

(]) Gunamoke

Cil Ill liZ News

m i n.)
(ID Eyewltn111 Newt

3:00

wan ted: she

become

to

U ill N-acenter

on the same play t hat insp ired 'Hello. Dolly' and
'The

tern s hip sh e

d eci d es

EVENING

performam;: lil by the British
Nationa l Theatre is ba s ed

involved in a hun t to find
ancient Mayan treasures
beneath 1he city of Beverly ·

hnh.

(f2l

Game

87

,:IJ.

';

U W NBC Nlgh~y N-o
. (D.- GrMn Acre•
C!l Outdoor Ufo
; ;" o

(]) SportaC.nter

Good· 1 Exci'VIItlng, btllment1.
foot.,., driv.wey1. nptlc llnkl.
land1caplng. C.ll enytlm. 114441 ·4137. Jtm• l . Devison.

,

....,

Electric
One Day 11 a Tlm4 , : •
•
8 :35 'Cil Carol Burnett
7:00 G (J) PM .Magezln.(]) Courtahlp of Eddle'l
Father

C a M Cleaning &amp; Fumec•
Repair. Alto plumbtng. 10 ytl
experience. Call 114 -2!11 ·

B3

of economic and investrn_ent maners.
9:00 U I]) CD Mlollta of Sol·
ence The misfits b ecome

MOVIE: ' MIIunde'r&lt;f:
'~-

The Lono Renger
(J)
Mr. Belvedtre
(CC) While Mr. Belvedere
coactH!It George on giving
a speech loa local orga nization , Kevin learn• an importent
ie11on
about
beauty and the oppos ite
sex.
(fl) Wall Sti'Ht WMk Lou is
Rukeyaer analyzes
the
' 80'• with a weekly review

11

IB

s..

Dti!'l-lll. wlclowltll......,.
conip .. UOO. CiU 114-241·
1012.

R, . .

(CC)

liD Body

JIM 'S PWMIIINO a HEATING .
At. 1, Boa 381, Otlipotie. Ctll
814-317-0171.

"'"'' ....."'"· •»C'-178·
1313-lp.m.

72

~-2
· 1 Cont.ct

Cl) Doclor Who

Jr. oWner.

1Ill whit• Muet8ng wtttt red
Int-. A·1 ' condition. 814742-2328.

et.ooo mil... ••c

II ([) . . (D)"'tll•vt-•

Cil Ill II! ABC Novto
11J NBC Nowa
U (J) ® CBB News

Phone 11o&amp;-~ · 3888 or 114·
.WI ·4477

0

azda SporULook ·

11:ood'

ltlfiO,

1113 ptymoutll A-t SE 4
door, IIUtontllic, AC, PI, PI,

·"'"

____

(MAX}

&amp;

•

~

tlD Eytj
New1
(fi)
rhouM
·
•
. , Olff'reht Stroku
(HBOJ MOVIE: ' BrMklh~ ,2
Etectrlo Boosialoal" ~ ..., ..

.

PWMBING
AND HEATING
Cot. Fourttl end Pine
Go-No. Ohio

B:3o

..:._

-.,....--,, ·-,·.

Tu
\ (JJ

O.t your c•FJMt In thlp thepe
wtth Cepttln Steemer, furnltuf'l
claeninu·weter dtmege WOtk.

~ ARTER'S

L~tings--------------------~--------------------------------------------~----ill
ell
SATURDAY
Ill liZ
Cil

.'

(I)

881·3802

B2

1/3/86

8:00

Flollry or cllbla tool drilling.
MMt -.llscompletted Hmedily.
Pump ..._ and MM01. 3()4 .

304-875-2285 .

Tetevi,St~ott
FRIDAY

E1'ening

1182 Chevy CIYI.... bid . I

Bulldlnt lrlotorioh

bUij ijOU

wJndowe. Fret tttlmlttt. CIM

71 food Pinto btodt wl111 rod
11rip•. runs • looks good,
•100. Cd I to 10 Pll, 114441·4412.

Tractor. rtclial uw. grind1r
tander, drtll pqse. tirt chaine.

Blod&amp;, brick, ...,., pip•. win·
dowt, llfiMII, etc . Cleude Win·

afford to

know?

J.and..J.. lnatall•don. Roofln8. ,

8:015 . (() Andy Gritfl1h ·

mons. Scope pricld 1370. be . ·cruiH, rwr window dtfrotter,
47.000 mllort. 1... Plymaudl
Cand. »4-175-1141 .
Turilmo 2.2 ·•utametic, AC.
One tt.et:rlo, 1 gt101ina t lr •nroof. 1t.OOO mHtl. Cell
compNMOr 15 HP. f710 . tech . 814-379-2728 . .
3404-171·3002.
1171 Conaard I cyl.. outo .. PS,
Apt.' II,. goo ..... *78 . 304 · good cortd. C.U14· 441·1122'
175 -4138.

65 Building Supplie1

cost- a loi:
can't

moneij and

1M. local r.rerenc.~ fumiah-t .· :
FrM Mttm.tM . Call collect
1-114-237·0481 . dey or ntght .
R o 1 ere I a a 1 "'e ~n t
WltlfJitoOflng. ~

et4·211·1932- 4PM.

1112 Como.,, ........ AM·FM
AC. cruiM. Y·ll. ntw
CornmodoN 14 complete, 304· tlrw, muot ••· Col ..,..oi4837H.
.
175-1712 lflor 1:00.

870 Ill. Cont. 12 go. )04-ltl·
3011.

qenerous,Rover. ..

another'

rt~ced carpenter. ~ectrid1n. ·
maaon, Pllnttr, roofing Unclucl·
lng hot 11r tppfie~ttonl 304·

uoo.

Ruger Rtfte No. 111 300 Win ·
ch•tlf Meonum with 3al81m·

or later!

Home
lmprovementl

RINGLES'S SERVICE. exp•·

1911 Corvtlr good oond .. new
tlr•. new bettlry, nMdt rune
-::--:---:--:-:---:-:-~ ' I up . 78,000 mlr...
CoN
Serioua lbout lo1ing w-'ght1 IU-241-5071 ,
Contact Gloria Gme. At. 2 . 1oa
282. Letart. WV. 21253. 304· 1874 FOf'd Country SQUirtttiU·
882-3112.
onwagon , 11,000. axe. cond.

Save 50 per cernll Flathlng
errow eigne 1211911 Ugftted,
non -trrow · *211 . Unlighted
f:Z11. (FrMII'tterall s.. ~CIIIy .
18001423 -0113, tn¥tima .
CIOOll~l -2121. ""· 104.

It's nice to be

a woman
40u hardl4

remov.l. Cell304-171-1331 .

1000.

3371.

You qave 40ur

Ftttty TrH Trimming, nump

GE w.lf'l., end drv-r. worlting .
UOO. 304-e?l-2111 or 171·

2 enow tlr... 2 ch••· towing
mirrow. g.,ct.! thrtddtt, celtlng
light tt.lturt . 1oiiM llet, 304·

Momm4 will
find out sooner

RON 'S

HeyforNJI. Orchardgreaa•,..

OuMn llze wat...a.d t175 . C.M
tfter 1:00. 304· 17&amp;· 37U.

14.. oolo. lull ozo Hldlllld.
• 304-875-3212 .

You can't keep
it a secret

114·H2-2172 .
t1.20. Col 114-311-8720. . 'f ~===::-==:-=~
COLEMAN WATER WELL

Good mlud My .....,. b...

7397 .. 678-1247.

1071.

DO IT .. --NOW.'l!'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltk.MIIH..Ime gueran· · ·

Urg• round btl11of hay UO • ·
Ctll11o&amp;-4oll-10&amp;.2 .,.., &amp;PM.

149-2237.

grev~.

ldotl whit ,..._,

OKAY. BIN KY, S HE'S
UP Oto.J THE EDG E
O F TH ' NEST! L ET'S

For Hit or trlld• prof•tlonet
built l)l"t:r.ltOck raca car chaalit,
look 1•• Jtgtter ctl1stie, Air lire
ch11111ger. Hyd. unit for Oltwr U
01' 88. OHvtr II Nnderd wldt
front. Oliver 4 bottom c1nv
plow. Calll14-388-9584 tfttr

&amp; Grein

houM COli. Hm11ton•.
IM'Id dtl~rtd. one ton
ond up . Jim Lonlor, 30f-671·
Lu~

LAioirlno ,.. -

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Hog tt.ady to butcher. 40c lb .
304·1171·4211.

1172 OMC INck V·S, Pl. ~a.
lonl llld, prloo . . 10. CON
304-4111-1187.

0311 .

258-1417.

CharoWt built pu,.a,rtd.

900 lbl. WoodWard Dhllco
Formo. C.M 114-37t-2187.

Collollin'o UOOCI Tin Shop. o 1,00011t00,ol-12, 13 , 14, 15.
18. 11.1 . I mllort 0101 Rt 211.
Coli 814-211-1211 .

F. M1o KindloWaod llovo, llko
new. LIMd 2 mon1ha. 1ntert or
!roo IIOrtdlnt. con 114 -441·

JOhn bolt for Mle. C•ll IU-

Liveetock

114-141·2114 lh. I p.m.

68

Boats and
Motors for Sale

40 utld uectort1o ctloOM from
• oo,..t.u line of .,.... • ulld
oqulp-1. Loovoot
In

4131 .

Cool Co. Coil114-448·1401.

Detuu 2 Wr. dowmown. com-

6"·211-1451 .
M•tty Ferguton, New Hol~d.
luah Hot lelel a lervlcl. Ov•

64

ledroo.m euite. 11¥1nt room
coudl on4 Zonllh -101o TV.
Moko otfoi. 114-M2-MIO doy-

aonry

76

tnytlme. 1100) a2B ·

0113.

Hou• coM. Lump. n:tUr. Zlnn

740&gt;1- AVo. 3 bdr .. t1 to
mo., dojl . ........ CoM 114·
441-4222 t aI.

CROSS I SONS

THE' LI TTLE MISS'r'S
[/ISCINE'fiY, S&lt;'tll l~ ?

30&gt;t-675-4111 .

Mixld herdwood tlabt, I 12. per
bundle, con116Mtg IPPtoa. 1'h
ton . fob. Ohio Ptht Co., l'omt·
ro¥. OMo . Phon• 114-982 -

VI. 304•112·2222.

64

Ferm Equipment

a14·4ti·OOI5.

. . . . . . .. Cal . . . . . . . . . .,
•• 114-742- 3001.

7PM.

One and two bldrooi"!W. Send

C&lt;tnllnllld· Ammo Solo ot2310

Uh

Upper Alvot Ad . botldo S10no
CrMt Mot.!. 11o&amp;-.WI·7398.

1101.

61

Wit.L '1QJ INF~M
MilS. OOOSON Of

W.O .

10 CJ -5 priced t2,300. 77 Oldl
tiOO. Coli 814 -387-7238.
•

,\ IIVI!ollll.k

Fl-ood 1w aoio U8.00 plc:llup
lood . U&amp;.OO - ...... Coil
114-211-8201.

4

VIliS &amp;

76

.tltll Suppl lt';

f

814·441-7741.

Olive St.• Galllpals. Hew • uted
woatl..... ...__•• ,.....,.. Ul
IUho t388, bunk bldl t118.
emron
tel. new •

CtH 114· 948·24.24 .

room. 1 ~ ger.g.. Ul5 mo.
Aof . • dojl - -· C.H 114·
441 ·1311.

K.nmore ••int mect.ine, wal ·
nut clb6ntl e50. Pntto cooker·
cann• lnclucHng Jtn 1215. Cell

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 12

Wuhlft , dt"'fM, Nfrigtrltort,
nng... Sktggs Appllancu,

Plb, G111ipoti•. UOO Wilier
plid. 2 bdr. CIII441-4411-

l3

m....

n.on.-

tl""'l l14·892·1015 -

uiMI bidroom .......

, 2xll mobHe home. 2

Houses for Rent

Household Goods

wrine- .......... • lho.. N.w
IMngroom •dtee 1181-e819,
ltmpe, alto buyint ootl • wood
atov•. Call 114·448-3119 .

Mobile Home•
for Rent

10 ....... &gt;I Collie • HUikoy
pupt. Jult t.e.n w.aned, t10
MtllftltM NOW for SPrinG tnd
. A... block • lilvor Pokl·
- CoN 114·441-1781. dovo · ooch
ne~e no ,.,.,., 7 month• old.
"' 81 4-.WI-9141 I.
U5. Colll14·441·0411 .
Slobo· II por _ , . whllo lhoy
AKC REg . Liloa Apoo pupplu,
Int. CoU 114-241-1104.
I WMk aold . worrn.d , flrtt
1 ftm.... Cell
lhota. 1
Bl..kpowdwti.H .
814-441-0706.
cent• .,nt, mui:de to.dlng
tuppht Mop. Kotbll'a Quns '
AOf!Oir. Mil C- Rd. 1n\llooft Burro1. 1·1 rno. melt. 1 · 18 mo .
A1. 7. H!l. M-F. 1-IPirl. Sol. mall. Very gende tnd well
~- - 814-742-2177.
1-5. Colll14-441-2311.

Sony VCR ltt1 Mtx . 11
CMtett•. 1200 . bcelttnt con·
clition. C.llll14-112·11357 .

304-171-7441.

114-248-1811.

1 80&amp; N. Main, 4 br houM.

2130.

0781.

F~lthtd .

Hou.. or.,., forretn.Fui'INthtd
" - 114·M2·23t1
dOWtf" 114-112-1721 - -

Newly remodeled . 304-171-

FCN" l'lnt Slllping Rooms and
Naflt hoult keepktg rooms. P...
Centrel Howl. Cal 814-448·

.,tch..,

TOWN a COUNTRY
REAL ESTATE,
Broker. 175-5548

41

Furniahed Roome

depoth.

021.900. Coli 114·311-871 1.

Gelllt High School. Atlluc..t to

46

mtnt. R~ttW PIYI wtter. DM_
llftd - t210 ,... montll
plut . . . .oh.
11 02 Vllind, 3 bechoonw. 2 46 Space for Rent
bttha, hint room, dining room,
fMiffiV room end
with
waat.• lfKf dryer hookup. Rtn· Mobile home lot, U'dO' o.w peye ...,. .....,. and eltc1ric. emtll•. 178 . .,... .. ld. 4th •
Ntll, OtHipoMI. Ctl 448-4o&amp;11
1178 PI' month lut ct.poelt.
APIUITMENTS fOR RENTe llfttr IPM.
2105 JKbon Aw., 2 IMd ·
rooms • ...,., 'khchtn and livl.,g Mobh home lot h• Rio Ortndl,
room, Nnter PtYt tfectric. 1210 Ohio. CoM 814·441·9682 .
pw month plus dtpoatt .
1410 Ohio, \bedroom, living COUNTRY MOBILE HomePtrlt,
room-kitch• combktatlon and Rout• 33, North of Pom.-oy.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

32

lnM-Nob¥tllo--.
1 btdroomhou•. fotat•arie.
Plf!loly fum-. 114·112·
121s .. 114-nZ-7314.

FOUN D Coc ker Spaniel. VIcinity

Buotino d aity gokf. li Ner colnt,

............

blttl . Renter allY• ~ectric and
wetef, f200 per month ,.us

pett.

Ca ll 614 · 446· 3159 .

A~o~e .,

At. 2. Wton. •rringtan HouH.
3 bedrooma. 1~ blttlt. modem
kitchllft. btMmtnt. 1 ~ .....
prioed In 1hl40's. Ctydt Iowen.
Jr., 304-171-2336.

triC1 . Colll14-441·0141 .

HOME OWNEAS -Refkttnct to
low flud ret• . UM~tqUityfor ~

l lt

Colioct 114-423-8211.

.-1.

V tcency fo r eklerl'fl m.-. or
woman In my homa. e..,.
rienced ctrt, reeeonlblt rttH.
CaN 814-H? -1321 .

f llld iiCI.II

Vicinity

W a n ted

wooded Hret. t..-nlt¥ · room.
dk\6ng room. F.A. h•t. 2 Rttta.
HNmlftt, fUIII· U7,000.

Why pey double priCI1 Wt build
big 4 bdr. ElrfyAmeric.n Homt~

Giilliliolrs

9

- - - - -- - - -lcly OWMf' . St.t.ly, 3 bedroom
hou• tt 10 E. St. In p..,.ay. l

I room

304-675-zeu .. 571-2242 .

12

8

Colloct 814-423 -1211.

'~

Help needld 6n privett hon tO
~" for Senior Ch:b:en . Appty574 Plum St .. Middleport. Ohio

91k fem ale and blk . with ttn ING UP. Join the Army N1dorual
mtlt German Sh~herda . both Guard and you will9t11 monthty
AK C regiatered with papen. ptycheck , e good part-time
304-675 -4092 .
c•r•r, 1nd many odler graM
ben.tit•. 304-1175-39150 or 1 .
1 ugly puppy 30.\ -88 2-.14 27 BOO· M.2 · ll19 .
before 4 .00
Lady to ltvt in with Mdtrty ledy.

&amp;

-=----::--:-:--:-:::- -lc-

1 · 4 . Equel Opportunlt¥

CHRISTMAS HOUDAYS PIL-

7

710. Col1114-441-0618

Emptoytt.

Mala German ShtPhe rd . Ltu W£ NEED YOUR PRIOR MIL·
than 1 year old C all &amp;14 -!Mt- ITAAY SERVICE EliPI'RIENCE
2 18 1
IN THE ARMY NATIONAL
GUARD Montllly poydtoc:ll.
6 male Co llie mixed puppi" 1nd r-.tirement ben.tfts, edueftlon..
9 doberman puppiH. 3 mal• &amp; a~tist..,CI . and other Mn.tita
female. 814 -992-7458 .
1Yiiillbl1 to our plrt•tima
m.mben. 304-1715-3950 or
To give away-pupp iu , miM ed 1 -800·14Z·3119 .
breed . mother it • b..,gla.
614-742 -20 10 anytime.
ARE THOSE BILU fROM THE .

6

I room hoi..- 1\ol, story, '\-\ beth
tl'low« bel.,..,t, 2 ctr g.age.
3Ylt a crt~~ N1 Walnul Twp on SR

" R.S. ollglblo prmOTOd. Appll·

e11tion1 .,. wailalblt at the
Hutrh Otptrtment tn 1M e...
rnMt of the Courthou• ·
Monday thry Fridty. 11-12 lftd

Furntthld 1 bedroom apt. No

room hou•on Rt . 33. N.w F .A .
f\lm.._ ' ilfOe lot. 123.000.

lla, U2.100. · C.M doya 114·
441·1111 ........ 114-441·
1244.

Wortol •eoo.oo

hou•. 2 bathe. Foroed

8y owno&lt;. Romodolod 3 bed·

houtlf for ....
flreplece, 3 mi. 1011th of Gllllpo-bedroom

~ad dllift4~ ­

Lendlcap6ng. Ott you·r fraa

Houses for Rent

...,. D - roqulrod. 814·
air hMt. Avalt.blt eround Jan. '992-2t31.
11. 1111. R-eo ooqulrld.
114 - 148 · 2611 lor APARTMENTS, rrtQl&gt;llo llomoo,
hou. .. Pt. P-mortdGIIo. 114-441·1221 .
s.duded country fwm houM, 3
Hdroom. f .A. h•t. Security 2 br aptrtmtnte In Henderson.
d -. f21D . montll. 114· 304-111-1972.
742-2177.
Nice 1 and 2 br apemntntt
3 bedroom' t.ou. for Nnt in downtown. 30.-171·22111
Mlddleport.t225 . per month 8 -6
plua ~it . P•y own utlHti•.
Coli 114-BIIZ -7607, oil . 5 MkkUtport N. 4ttt A'IMIUI. 2
WHitdl\'t.
bedroom, furnlthtcl apMtmtnt.
304-112-2111.

4

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E,..n.n.-.No Salet. .,.,..._
_,d MH·IddNIMd ~
tftv.-ope; E\an Vital -1147 341 I
Em-H Ad, Ft FL

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Cryptoquote: MAN 'S CHIEF MERIT
RES ISTING THE IMP ULSES o •• HIS
(Answers tomorrow) NATURE. - JOHNSON
AGENT STOLIO ' PERSON
Cl lttll&lt;l~ F~ 1 tvr 1 i S'f'ndl t l l t . t &gt;1&lt;
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What she was , afler • hard day's shoppingTIACO &amp; " SPENT "

\

.

•.

�Page-1

The Daily Sentinel.

3; 1986

Ohio

I

Ohioans support
21 drinking age

Announce
winners

t .,

~

{

COLUMBUS. Ohio iUPI I undecided, Tuchfarber said.
Although the state ls fighting the
The poll also Indicated that 32
federal government's attempt to percent objected to the federa l
create a national drinking age, a government forcing the higher
recent poll shows 75 ·percent of drinking age.
Ohioans support a drinking age 'ot
Ohioans can , legally purchase
21 for alcoholic beverages.
beer at 19 and liquor and wine at 21 .
In September, Ohio Attorney
The appeal says that "while
General Anthony J . Celebrezze Jr. states take no position on the iSSue
supported-South Dakota'sappeal of of an appropriate drinking age,
a U.S. District Court ruling that they uniformly believe lhat it is
upheld the legality of financial lmpermlsslble for the federal go·
penalltes against states that do not vernment to penalize states for the
raise their drinking age to 21 by free exercise of the constltutional
next fall.
rights reserved to the states."
The · federal 'government will
The coutt dismissEd South Dako·
withhold 5 percent of federal !a's claim that federal sanctions
highway money from non-comply· violated states' authority under the
ing states beginning Oct. I, and 10 21sl Amendment to the U.S.
percent the next year. The penalty Constitution to set condition lor
could cost Ohio~ million 0\·er two selling and drinking alcohol.
years, state officials said.
South Dakota also argued tha t a
The poll showing Ohioans are in drinking age of 21 cannot he a
favor of the 21 drinking age was condition for getting federal high·
conducted by the University of way money to which the state is
Cincinnati Institute for Polley entitled . Ohio and eight other states
Research.
- Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Mon·
"All major demographic sub- tana. Snuth Carolina, V('rmont,
groups identified In the survey have Wis&lt;.'Onsin and Wyoming - filed
strong majorities in favor d raising arguments supporting the South
the dr inking age to 21," institute Dakota appea L
Director AI Tuchfarber said. "This
In 1983. Ohiu voters !l'jected a
is even true of the 18-to 29-year-old proposal to raise the drinking age to
age group, two-thirds of which 21. No bills to raise the drinking age
support thls change."
to 21 hav"' be('n introduced in the
About 22 percent oppose raising Legisla tu re. but some reportedly
the drinking age, and the rest were all' 'li!~ works.

..

I

L

Meigs County happenings ...
Emergency squads
answer four calls
Meigs Count y Em"'rg('nc~· Medi·
cal ServiC(' !l'ports lour ca lls
Thursday; Middiepo11 at 9: 24a.m.
transported Paul Smith from the
lire station to VetNans M('morlal
Hospital; Rutland at 10:09 a.m.
transported Harold Davis from an
auto accident on Rt. 124 West to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Ra·
cine at 1:57 p.m. transported Fred
Scarbery from Fronl St. to Vete·
rans Memorial Hospital: Middle·
port at 11:19 p.m. !roated but did not
transport Rob('rt E . J ohn son Jr.

Veterans Memorial
Adm issio ns .. Rand y Ri!fle.
Shade: Micha('J Smith , Pomeroy;
Paul Smitll, Middleport; Harold
Davis, Rogers, Ark.; Sabrina Wil·
son. Rutland .
Discharges·· None.

Tuesday meeting St't
Dr('W Webster Post 39. American
Legion. will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday
for a di nner at th&lt;' post home.

Tret' Pickup

Three thousand and seventy-six
customers of Columbus&amp; Southern
Ohio Electric Co .. were without
power in two art'as approximately
14 hours New Yea(s Day according
to Ron McDade. C&amp;SOE area
manager.
McDade said f('Sidents in the Rio
Grande. Rodney and Thurman
area were without JX&gt;Wer from 6: 30

a.m. to 8 p.m. as a result of a
defi?Crive out side terminator.

McDade sa id while crews w ere
out trying to find the ca use.ol the
Fbo area problem, a circutt brea ker
1ripped out. causin g a pow·er ou tag&lt;•
in the Wilkesville and \' inton ar('Bs .
Powrr was off in those communities from 11 a.m. until around 8 p.m.
Thr Rio Grande area has 1.379
customers while thE&gt; Wi lkPS\'il lf' \ 'inton area has 1,697.

Teenager's
body found
CINCI "&lt;NATI ICP! 1 - Ch!ldren
playing in the woods Thursda~·
disco\'Cn:&gt;d in eas tern Ci nci nnali the
body of a Kentucky teenager
missing sinC(' [l('c . 6.
The Hamilton County coroll('r b\
today was ex)X'Cted to ha,·e estab·
Jished the cauS£&gt; and time of death of
Eddie Pence. 14, Newpor1. Kv .
PenC(' n('Ver made it hol11f' from the
Newport AltNnali,·c Middle School
fou r wef&gt;ks ago. \•,: hpre hf' was i}1the

eighth grade.
[)(&gt;nnis Lucas. who \\·as shot and

killro Monday bv a police sha rp·
shooter to end a :ll-hour hos tagP
crisis in Newport , claimed to have
stabbed Pence to death . and
dumped his bodv on the Cincinnati
side of the Ohio Hiver.

Guilty pleas given
Two Middleport womPn received
sL\ month su s)X'nd~ a i lt erm s and
werr lined S2i after pleading ~'Uill~
to theft Tul'Sday in Gallipolis
Municipa l Cout1 .
,Jo A. r-.:ew9Jmf' of

Po mPro~· .

and

Glad~· s Bartl'! I. 49. of Middleport ,
were also placed on 18 months
probation 10 charges stemming
from «'parate incidpn ts at Mur
phy·s Mart in thP Si lver Bridge
Pla?&lt;L

Mt't'ts Mondav
ThP Letart r:tementa"· PTO will
meet at 7 p.m. Monda~· at lh&lt;'
S&lt;'hoot There will he a ~'\Jest
Sp!.'akrr
The Rig &amp;&gt;nd Ci\·ita n Club will
mrrt (If i :.'~l p.m . Monday at thf'
l'ommun•t v Action Agrnc~· OfftCt&gt;s

SCANS COll.ECI'ION

- Ollcqo !luft.Tbnes
t'Olwnnisl Judy Markey looks over her Ricky Nehon
scrapbook and grieves over her leeJiaC~&gt; Idol, Rielly

Nelllon, who died New Year's e\le when a DC-3
crashed near DeKalb, TellaS. UPI.

Fire consumes Nelson plane
followin~ emergency landing
DE KALB, Texas I UPI I - The
lll·lated plane carrying singer
Ricky Nelson and his entourage
mad"' a good emergency landing
with a fi re on board and came to a
complet"' stop before flames con·
sumed th(' craft . fed eral officials
say.
Nelson. his Iiane(' and five
members of his band who died in
the accident succumbed to smoke
inha lation and burns. the Dallas
County medical examin"'r's ofllc('
said.
But . a spokesman said, " II is not
known whether they died befof(' or
after the plane" touched ground.
The D\ .:1 was carrying Nelson
and his band from Alabama to a
New Year's Ew conc"'h In Dallas
Tul'Sday when the pilot rad ioed for
help - sayin!! that choking smoke
was filling the cockpit -and put th('
craft down in rural east Texas.
.Jim Burnett , chairman of thP
:-;at iona l Transportation Safety
Board. told a m:•ws conlerrn(.'{'
Thursday night that the twin·
engine propeller plane settled to th('
g-rouoo on all th.fl't' landing gear
and had come to a full stop in a mw

GALLIPOLIS - A $~ 5
budget to opera tP Ga ltia
government and serYin•s
was appro\'l'd Thursda\

million
Coun ty
in 19~
bv the

count y commission.

The bUdget is alx&gt;u t $1 million k•&gt;S
than the $10.;; million ~p~.·nding bill
approved last .Ja nuary for 1~&amp;1.
· Antic iapa ted revenuPs. certified
by the Gallla County Budget
Commission. wilt a mount 10 about
$9,848,76.1, while the budget ap·
proved by thP commission tolD I'
$9,551,840.

Lottt&gt;ry winners
CLEVELAND tUPI I - Thurs
day·s winning Ohio Lottery
num tx&gt;rs: Daily Numher
6ll .
Ticket sa les t o t a I e d
$L,220.J5;;.CoO, wit h a,,payof.l du"' of
$644,!l92.:i0. PKK-1
486!\. '
P!CK-l ticket .&lt;;a les totaled
SlH0,963. wit h a payoff due of
. $81 ,545.
PICK-I $1 straight bet pay&gt;
$3,840. PICK4 $1 box bel pays$160.

Weather forecast
Today ... mostly cloudy and a little colder. T"'mperatures fa lling to
the mid JJs by evenin g. South winds becoming northwest 10 to 15
mph.
TonlghLpartly cloudy. Low 25 to :ll. Light northwest winds.
Sal urday ...mostly cloudy. High in the upper :lls.
Chance of precipita tion is 20 percent today .. 10 percen t tonight ..
and 20 percent Saturday.
Extended forecast
Sunday throogh Tuesday
Fair Sunday and Monday wllh hichs In the :alsand low :Jls. Lowslli
to 25 Sunday momln1 and $ lo lli Monday, A chanoe of rain or snow
Tuesday. Hips in the 3011 and lows WI the leens.

'

WASHINGTON tU PI \ - The
administration is weighing ex panded sanctions aga inst Libya in
retaliation lor the Rorne and
\'ienna terrorist attacks that LJ.
b~·a n leader Moammar Khadafy is
· accused of finan cing.
Hespond lng to Khadafy 's asser·
t Jon tl1at the attacks well' just Hied.
a ~ t ate Departnwnt spokesman
chargro Thursday th(' Libyan
leader was " making excuses for the
indiscriminate slaughter of innocen t men. women and children ."
Th&lt;' State Department said rurrent economic and diplomatic
sanctions against Libya - Including travel restrictions, a ban on
exports of high technology and and
a 1982 oil embargo - have been
effective.
.I
But department spokesman Cha·
rles Redman said further tactics
are under consideration.
"We are looking a t other things
we cou ld do, " Redman said. "These
measures, of course, would be more
effective if they were underiaken
more widely by th(' International
community. There Is no doubt
about that.
He declined comment oo possible
military retaliation. But CBS News,

•

Bob Hoeflich's 'exciting' New Year's Eve- Page

Vol. 20 No. 48
CGpyriglrtld 1985

B-l

Middleport- Pomeroy- Gallip21is-Point Pleasant

WASHINGTON (UPI ) - The United States has
shifted some of its naval might to within range of
North Africa to be ready if Presidrot Reagan orders a
retaliatory strike against Arab terrorist bases in
Libya, Pentagon sources say.
The aircraft earlier USS Coral Sea left Naples,
Italy, Friday on a course that will take It past the
Libyan coast, and Navy planes with sophistica ted
jamming gear were moved from Washington state to
a base In Sicily, the soun:es said Friday.
One source said plans lor retaliation were being
worked out in the event an a ttack is ordered by
Reagan.
" U there are contingency plans, you have to he
prepaced to tak~ the contingencies," one source said.
At tlle same tim~he crews of th(' ca rrier USS

Moore
meets
•
mmates

I Continued from page 1I
Spratley estima ted the awrage
residential cust001er will save $6 a
year on the Columbia credits. The
utUity estimated the average sav·
ing at $5 a year.
.
Spratley said the 189 communi·
ties negotiate their natufl)l gas
rates directly wrth Columbia in
multi-year contract s. which contain
automatic rate lncreaS£&gt;S. He said
the utility volunteered to suspend
these.
"This concession is proba bl ~
Impossible for any one communlty
to achieve and shows the strength of
statewide and uniform rate regula ·
tion," said the consumers' attorney.
He said he will eontinue to ask
cities and villages In Columbia
Jerritory to join in sa-king a single
rate "and finally end Columbia's
discriminatory pricing practices." ·

•
ram,
snow

Along the Rlver ............... B-l-6
Business ........................... D-1
Dealhs ............................. A-7
Editorials ......................... A-2
Sports ......................... "' C-1-7
Take-One ..................... Insert

Sunday. January 5, 1986

..

MOUNDSVILLE. W.Va. tU Pi l
- Officials restored ordPr to the
West Virginia Penitentiary and
completed a lockdown alter rioting
Inmates released the last of their
hostages to end the two-day upris·
ing and met with Gov. Arch Moore
to discuss their grievances.
Moore, aL5: :ll p.m. Friday, said
the !!»-year-old prison in West
Virginia's northern panhandle was
back In total control of correctiorl6
officials for the llrst time In 48
hours.
,
Three inmates - convicted
killers Kent Sile and .Jess Atkinson
and lddnapper Harold Deo n were slain by convicts during the
uprising.
The governor, as part of an
agreement to end the bloody selge,
met with Inmate leaders lor 90
minutes to hear complaints about
conditions in the fortn&gt;ss-llke
prison.
Afterwards, Moore character·
!zed the complaints as "personal
difficulties" and said "a reasonably
large pe=ntage of· them are
capable of being COff('C!ed in a way
that doesn't jeopardize control of
t~ institutlon."
But Moo!l' said the convicts
would he denied visitors and kPpt In
confinement until officials com·
plete an Jnvestil!ation into the
rebellion and convict slayings.
Th"' seven remaining hostag('S
were freed at noon Friday and 110
correction; dfin·rs marcht'Ci inside
to retake the prison's south wing ,
where convicts held 17 hostag&lt;'s

America, the battleship USS Iowa and their escort
ships at Atlantic F1eet .headqua rt('rS In Norfolk, Va.,
have be('n alerted to the posslbiltty of an unscheduled
pepioyment to the Mediterranean, the sources said.
No decision had be('n made about dispatching the
ships across the Atlant ic to the Mediterranean . a 1&lt;k:l
a y voyage, they said.
The Pentagon has prepared several mllltary
optJons lor Reagan, but the president sought to
dismiss concern the United States was preparing for
rataltatory action aga inst Libyan territory.
"I'm not aware that we'll' doing anything out ct the
ordinary at ail," he told reporters In Mexlcali,
Mexico, describing U.S. ship movements as "various
maneuvers and practiC('S."
But asked If the United States was planning any

retaliation for Libyan SljppoJ1 of tenorists attacks,
Reagan turned his palms upward and said, "1'\o
comment."
The Un ited States and Israel ha ve blamro Libya lor
supporting the Abu Nidal terrorist group , woose
memb('rs allegedly carried out bloody attacks at the
airports in Rome and Vienna Dec. 'IT. American and
lsraell officials have hin ted at retaliation.
Ubyan leader Moammar Khadafy da red the
United States and Israel to try, warning such an
attack cou ld lead to a wider w·ar in the
Mediter ranean, as wel l as possible attacks in thP
United States.
The move of at least seven EA-6B Prowler radar
Jamming aircraft from their American base to the
joint U.S. -ltallan base at Sigonella signaled U.S .

F"""'7:.....-~~~...--

in forecast

-Page A-3-

9 Sections . 58 Pages
A M.ultlmedta Inc. Newspaper

MEE'JS INMATES - Gov. Arch Moore, r1pt,
meets with inmllles to bear their grievances over
conditions in the West Virginia Penlt8ltlary , Moore
told the convicts be would llslen to their complaints
'

they grabbed while seizing control
the prison at 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday.
None of the hostages released In
stag('S Wednesday night. Thursday
afternoo n and Friday were seriousiy hm1 . but Moot'!' said some
had minor injuri&lt;'S an d "obvious
marks of being roughed up."
Moo1-e sai d he has an "open
mind" about the Inmate demands,
but emphasized . "There was
of

p!l'parat ions for • possible milita ry action .,gainst
terrorists based in Libya, tlle sources said.
The sophisticated electronic jamming gea r aboa rd
the Prowl"'rs could be used to &lt;)('fend att acking
aircraft from sutiace-to-a ir missiles. such as the
Sndet-built SAM ·os Libya is in stalling as a defense
aga inst high -alt itude planes.
One option considered for U.S. at tacks on Libya was
a raid by B-52 bombers, but tha t was discarded
almost immediately, a U.S. o!ficial said.
The movement of the Prowlers was precautionary,
in part because the Coral Sea is not equipped with any
of Ihe planes, said the sources. who spoke ono:mdition
they nol b(' i\l('nlifiro . But lou r squadrons of the
Navy's n('w F-18 strike fi ghter were aboard the
earlier.

Gallia, Meigs jobless
rate up in November

ooly after all IJoslales had been released. The final
seven hostages were freed Friday after 42 hours of ·
captivity.

agreement on amn"'sty In f('gards
to the hostage situation."
John Prlc(o, the governor's press
aide, also said the agreement to end
the convict takeover did not Include
amnesty lor those involved in the
slayingJ;.
"The inciden(.'('s of homicide Is a
sq&gt;arate Issue that will be dealt
with at a later tlme," PriC(' said.
Two convict leaders told repor·
ters Thursday tha t inmates had

tried repeatedly to improve prison
conditiOns thmugh lawful mean s
and warned there m uid be another
tiot If offici als ignored their
demands.
In 1983 a state Judge gave
con:ections officials fi ve years to
remedy 13 unconstitutional condl·
lions at the prison, including
insu fficient living space. resident'!'
and dinin g areas Infested with
rodents and vermin.

SPECIAL

$3995
4 CYL. or II CYL.
WITH COUPON
Includes:

OIL
OIL FILTER
PLUGS
SCO'PE TEST

GAlLIPOLIS - The unemploy·
meni rates in Ga lUa and Meigs
Counties rose slightly between
October a nd Novemb('r, reports th&lt;'
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services.
With the exception of Jackson which posted a modest decrease the November rise in the Jobless
rate for Ga llia and Meigs was in line
with a trend toward higher unem·
ployment thmughout southeastern
Ohio.
Gallla's jobless rate rose by
six-tenths of one percent - from 9.9
to 10.5 percent - during the
onl"-month period. Meigs County
postro a seven-tenths of one percent
increase- from 10 to 10.7 percent.
Both counties fl'gislered their
lowest rates of unemployment lor
19S5 during October.
The bu f('a u !l'ports 1.500 of
Gallla's estimated work Iaroe of
14 ,1m without work in November.
In Meigs, I.nl of that county 's
es timated work force ol11.500 were
listed as Jobless during thr month .
Athens- with a reported Jobless
rate of 9 JX'I'Cent - was the only
county in the region to post an

Art'a jobless
rate in November
County

Percentage

Athens ... ... ... .. .... .... .. ..9.0 (8.8)
Gallia .... .. .. ...... ... ..... 10.5 (9.9)

Jack.&lt;;On ...... ..... ... .... I t.2 ( 11.5)
Lawrence .. .. .... .. .. .. .. l2.3 (11.4 )
Meigs .. .. .. .. ...... .. ..... 10.7 (10.0)
Vinton ................... .. I3.R ( 11.9)
.
JOBLESS RATE - With the
exception of Jack.'!Oil, all counties In the region posted an
Increase In WJemployment lJe.
tween Octoller and November,
reports the Ohloo Bureau of
Employment Services. (October figu res In parenthesis)
unemployment rate below 10 JX'r·
cent in Novf'mhf'r .
Statewkl~. the jobti"Ss rat e h"'ld
steady at 9 percent during the
(X'riod. Nationall.v . the unemplo~ · ·
men! rat e fe ll by on!'-tenth of one
)X'rcent- from 6.RtoG.;- )X'rcent hetween Oct ober and November.

One killed, five ·injured
in early morning fire
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. The state Fire Marsh all's Office
has been called In to dssist wit h the
Investigation of an early Saturday
morning fire that killed onP (X'rson
and Injured fi ve others- including
two fil'l'men - a spokesman for the
Point Pleasant Pollee J)(opartmPnt
said.
Mae Casto. 84. Point Pleasant.
appat't'ntly d_led fmm smoke inhala·
.tlon during 1he fire ll'hich guttro her
one-story, wood framl' home at 21~
North Main St. , th(' spokesman
said. The fire rna~· have been
electrical in natu re, he ~ddPd .
Thfl'(' ~pie . Including the vic·
tim 's husband , Gay Casto.~ . wei'!'
In the house at the time of the 4: 20
a.m. lire. A nu rsing su(X'rvlsor a t
Pleasant Valley Hospital identified
the others as Phillip Honaker. 36,
and Gloria Honaker. 'n.

Both Mr. Casto and Mr. Honaker
were adm itted to Pleasant \·allt'l
Hospital suffering from smoke
inhalation, the nursing SUIJf'IYisor
said. Thry an&gt; listt'&lt;i in stabJ p
condition . Mrs. Hon akf'r ~nt !'i
ln'a1L'(I for srn okP lnhal:t1ion and

rPleasro .
Thr nursing suJX&gt;rvis.or also sa ic1
Charles Mullins, 44 . Poin l i'l&lt;'asa nt .
a memtx&gt;r of the Point Pleasa nt
Volunteer FlrP Department. was
admit tro to the illspital for chest
[J&lt;1ins. He Is Ustro1in fair condition.
Anothrr fif('man . Jeffrey Clark .
30. Route 2. P oint Pleasant . wa s
tl'l'ated at the hospital for an ankJp
inJu!J· and rclm sro . th&lt;' Slt)X'rviso•
added .
'
Further d&lt;•t: ti ls of th&lt;' fi re were
unavailable (X'odlng completion of
th e poli c e de oarrm e nt' • ' .
investigation

'
U.S.-Mexico
summit ends

PCV
AIR FILTER
ADJUST TIMING
IDLE SPEED
OONS'lRUCFION UNDERWAY - An addldon to the MelpCouri)'
Emef'lellcy Medical Services' huDdlnl on Mulberry HeisNs l&lt;i
e•pected to be llalshed by mld·Maroh. CoruttntciiOn bepn In late
November by lite local firm, Roush Construction Co., owned by G"'l

COOPER

Roulh. FIDIII COlt lor lhe projed Ill 1t1 be apprvlllmaleb SM,OOO. 'l1le
addition wll be ulled u a!....._, center for EM!!
as weD as
office and storage space. Pictured left to r1abl are COII!Jirudtoa workel'!l
wry Hayne~~, llllp,erlntendenl, Andy l'alterwn and Erie Iiams.

pe_.,

Mine deaths drop to record low·in '85

CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH DODGE
MIDDUPOI1, 01110
·92-6421

Ohio weather:

tntint

Check:
Khadafy, interviewed by Wes t·
e111 reporters Wednesday, said the
anacks were Justified as rPVenge
for the Oct. l Israeli bombing of
Palestlne Liberation Organization
headquarters In Tunlsla .

Inside:

D-1

Forces preparing for possible Libyan strike

TUNE-UP

"We part lculary abhor Khad·
afy's making excuses lor the
indiscriminate slaughter of innocent men, women and children an d
re)ecting the fact that these were
!lire acts of terrorism, " Redman
said .

..,.p~

tmts

PLUS

airline El AI .

her -dreams

•

OIL &amp; FILTER

quoting unnamed sources, reported
AmeriCan fom&gt;s In the Medlterra·
nean were being lJJUt up and that
the Soviets were monltorlng the
developments.
Officials hope that the terrorist
attacks !)('c. '!I at tile Rome and
Vienna airports will prompt Inter·
national su~rt for sanctions. The
attacks left 18 people dead, includ·
ing five AmeriCans.
The administration charges tbe
Khadafy rEgime with harboring
and flnanctng tile Palestln~ ter·
rorist group, headed by Abu "N idal,
blamed lor last week's anacks,
which were aimed at th(' Israefl

senrice awards

B-'2

I Area death

Additional sanctions against Libya
reviewed by Reagan administration

Evan~ . farms

Richanl Reeves discuS!~~ 'baby-boomers' as they
turn 40 - Page A-2

.• ·"

pasture befon&gt; flames consumed it. Center In Uttle Rock, Ark.
The flash fire was so hot it melted
Rank and Fergu~Dn escaped
the aluminum off the craft
from the aircraft Just before it was
Pilot Brad Rank had radioed lor destroyed .
help, saying he had smoke inside
NTSB spok('sman Brad Dunbar
ihe cockp)t. Three minutes and six said the investlga tlng team still is
SECOnds lat('f, the aircraft vanished trying to locate the Iiane's maintl"from radar screens In Forth Worth , nance records and pin down Us
Anna H. Carson
investigators said. •
ownership.
Of the six fire extinguishers
NTSB lnvestlgator Rudol!Kapus·
Word has been receivro of th('
aboard, the only one used was in the tin said It probably would take
death of Mrs. Merle lAnna
recent
rear cabin, rut l~vestigators stU! about six months to reaci · a
have not determined where the fire conclusion on what caused the Holten Car~D n of Columbus on
Dec. 18. She was the daughter of the
started, Burnett said.
accident.
late
Charles William a nd Mary
The bodies of the Sl'\len victims
Nelson's bOdy was removed from
Strohmeyer
Holter. Funeral servi·
were huddled in the front part ct the 'the medical exa miner's office
ces
were
held
!)('c . 21 with burlal in
cabin, Just outside the door to the Thursday for transport to Ca llfor·
Sunbury,
Ohio.
·
cockpit, b(' said.
nia . Famlty spokesman Greg
Rank, hospitalized In good condl· McDonald , Nelson 's manager in
No dancing tonight
tlon at St. Michael's Hospital in Los Angeles, said funeral arrange·
Texarkana, Ark ., cannot talk be· ments would b(' com piNed today.
Square dancing will not be held at
Nelson, 45, and his band were on th&lt;' Long Bottom Community Build·
cause ol tubes In hls throat but he
indicated by nods that the smoke their way from Guntersville, Ala ., ing tonight as announced ('artier.
came from the cabin area , invest!· to Dallas, where he was booked for
a New Year's Ev(' show.
gators said.
Nelson's flana&gt;e, Helen Blair, 'n; ~---~----------~I
Co-ppilot K"'nneth Ferguson, 43,
the only other survivor, was burned bass guitarist Patrick Woodward ,
on his face , hands and back. His 35; lead guitarist Bobby Neal, 38:
condlti:m was upgraded from crltl· drummer Rick lntveid , 23: pianist
cal to serilus Thursday at the Andy Chapin, :ll; and · sound
University of Arkansas Medical irehnlclan Clark Russell, li, died in
the accident.

in PomPrOY .

Budget approved

woman 'spins'

Settlement

The annual Chris tmas Ire&lt;&gt;
pickup will he held in Mlddi('port
on Monday, Jan . 7. Residents ar('
asked to place their tr('('s near the
curb in front of their homes and
they will he pic ked up by the Str('('t
department free of charge .

C&amp;SOE has outage

Mefgs County

The holiday season saw the.
awarding of prlz!'S lor special
promotions held in conjunction with
th&lt;' S£&gt;ason.
Pomeroy flower Shop prize
~&gt;inners were Opal Kauff, Hemlock
Grove. a Cabbage Patch doil, and
Robyn Stout, Syracuse, a giant
filled stocking.
Winners at the Middleport Dairy
Isle were Carl Gagnon, Mlddlep&lt;irt,
firSt prize, a AM·FM st('reo tape
player, with $5 gift C('rtlficates
going to Gary Mitchell, Lron, w.
Va.; Charles Rife, Middleport:
Roger Watkins, Pomeroy; Gary ·
Adams. Rutland, and Mary McKin·
ney, Rutland.
Winner first prize at th(' 3-ln·On('
Restaurant in Pomeroy was Debbie
Ball, Pomeroy, an AM·FM stereo
tape player and $5 gift certificates
were won by Tom Thelss, Racine;
Darrell R Duncan , Ravenswood;
Ronald K. Zerkl£', N('W Haven;
Stella Krebs, -~tart, W. Va., ancl
Kevin Taylor, Middleport.
January I prizes awarded by the
Pomeroy Fire ~riment went to
Leon McKnight. VCR: Charlene
Thomas, gift certificate at Powell 's
Super-Valu: Jessica Blat'ttnar,
shotgun: Jackie Starcher, televi·
skm S('t; Hank Cleland. gift certifi·
cate at Hartley' s Shoes; VIolet ·
Brown, watches;
Carl Hysell,
socket set; Norman Price, gift
certifica te at Pomeroy Flower
Shop; Julie Sisson, savings bond:
Art Slusher, rod ' and r€('1: Jane
HyS£&gt;ll, coff€(' marker; Sue Kibble,
knife: Margaret Wyatt, search
light, and Danny Crow, gift certifi ·
cate at Sugar Run MilL

Vi

I
I· S I
Monday I
thru I
Friday I
1-.- -: -,-.--------~- J

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Mine Safety and Healtlf Admtnls·
Jration said Friday work· related
deaths in' the coal, metal a11d
non-metal mining industries fell to
historic lows in 198i.
'
MSHA Ad.minlstrator David Ze·
geer sa id preliminary data sh&lt;lwed
there were fr1 deaths In the nation's

coal nelds and another 5o miners
were killed In metal and non metal
mJntng .
Both ligures were the lowest t•vrr
recorded by the federal gowrn
1'1\ent for the respective Indus! rles.
It was only the second time sin(.'('
the government began taking sta·
Ustk:S that roal mining deaths fell

below 100 in till' year. The previous
low tlgu.re for 'coal mining dealhs
was 70, reconled ·m1983.
The number of 1!ei coal rnlnlng
deaths was almost half that or 1984,
when 127 coal miners were kliJed by
accidentS~ lncluplng 'II i~
unctergrouoo lire at a
Utah, mine. ·
j

Kentucky alone suffered 17 t'Oal
mining fata!'it!es last year, more
than any other state, but that sttll
represented an improvement over
the s!Bie's death toll of 39 coal
mining deaths In 198t.
Following Kentucky were West
VirJinla, with 16 deaths In 1!ei and
(Continued on page A3)

WASHI NGTON JUP! 1 - Pl'('Si·
dent Reagan and Mexican Presi·
dent Migu el de Ia Madrid each
spoke of progress made at t~ir
Mexlcall summit , but undeJ-cur·
rents of disagreement prevailed
during the talks .
,
Reagan . [('m inded de Ia Madrid
publicly about hispreviousdenuncl·
allons of authoritarian regimes in
Latin America , and de Ia Madrid
disputed Reagan's contention that
Mexico has failed to do enough to
spur fOreign invesiment.
Reagan. In a luncllE&lt;\0 toast in the
Mexican border town of Mexicall,
described their sessions as "open
and candid,'' a diplomatic way of
saying not everything on the
agenda was selUed to mutual
satisfaction.
However, Reagan said each of his
lour meetings with de ·Ia Madrid

since takl n~ office "SN'ms morr•
productive than the last."
Apart from improv &gt;d a Into,.
phere. senior ,\meric an officia ls
said the talks produced U. S.
suppo11 for a Mexican·propoSPd,
multilateral "drug enforcelll('nt
summit " to examine global 'dro g
trafficking, and comm itment s to
remedy cross- bonler di sputes 0\'er
po lluti on, i in mjgr a t Jo n a nd
fisheries.
De Ia Mad rid, also noting In·
creased cooperat Jon between t~
hi'O countries, warned, howev~r.
that "potential areas of conflict tlult
we must guard against and prevent
have also grown."
Unlike post summits between the
two nations, MeXIco's lukewarm
support of u.s. hlicklng lor anUSandinlsta reb('ls In Nicarag\1!1 was
(Continued on page· A3

'

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