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..Pau•

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-·' -Local

briefs:-____,

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,, P.omeroy chamber meeting set
~gueSts wm be on hand when tl1e Pomeroy Area Chamber r1
Coounerce meets at noon Tuesday at the offices r1 The Ohio Power
Co.
.
Tile include Jolm .Rose, ofllce or conference workshops, Ohio
Un~ty; Tom Serey r1 Mid-West Steel, and Randy Marnhout or
theM. &amp; M. Medical ·E!Julpment Co. Lunch will be provided at $3 a

.,

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penDil.

···. Meigs EMS ·reports eight runs
"

Monday, November 11, 198&amp;,

Pomeroy-Midcleport, Ohio

10, The Dally Sentinel

Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports eight calls &lt;Ner

• tl1e Weekend.

'
Sliturday, at 7:13a.m., Pomeroy was called to :ll4 Lasley St. lor
f. wunam Wats:&gt;n who was treated but )lot transported.
SUnday, at 12:40 a.m., Rutland went to Edmundson Rd. lor Eva
Barrett to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuwers Plains at 7:27a.m.
transported Edna Walker to Veterans Memorial Hospital; At4:41
p.m., Pomeroy Fire Department was called to a minor fire at the
Jamie Ash reslilence on State St.; Syracuse at 3:51 p.m. went to
Second St. 'or Alberta Hubbard to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 5:_!11 p.m. was called to an auto accident on Rt. 1~ lor
Melanie Arnold who was treated at the scene; Racine at 5: 34 p.m.
transported WUUam Pickens to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Bashan Fire Department at 6:07p.m. was called to an auto !Ire on
,, Eagle Ridge Rd.

Inside:

LaWmakers to meet ·this

By the Bend .........., .. Page 3
Classlfteds ..... ... Pages6, 7, 8
Comics-TV .... .......... Page 9
Deaths .. ........ ......... Page 10
Editorial .. ... .. .. .. .. .. .. Page 2
Sports ........ .. .... .. Pages3,4,

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'

Aintnortty of lawmakers favors a items are bow high the limit should
"crecentrallzed" system under be on recovery ofdamagesagalnsta
which auto emlssion systems woold klcal governmental unit, and wha~
be,lnspected and !!xed a\ participat- should be lmmuB? from lawsuits,;.•
The lite ot the Jolnt, Select
ing local serYlcestatlons.
Canmltlee
on Savings aud Loans Is.
A sovereign llnmunlty biD, stuck
In a jolnt conference committee to he extended through Dec. 31, will!
. . .,
since the legislators lett town ln ;treport due by Feb. 1:
Theworkers'com~llonstudy
July, may be ready lor a final vote.
The proposal restores Umlted panel wlll be given iu)tn Jan. 1 to
Immunity frool lawS~~ils for local come up with recommendations for
.
governments, which either have Improving the system.
The
savings
and
loan
committee
paid exorbitant premiums or have
been unable to obtain cove!'llge ·to will meet Tuesday to bear once
protect themselves tr&lt;:m an ever· . again from former state Cor!UJ1erce
Director Warren W. Tyler. '
Increasing number ot legal actions.
· Tyler testified last·IIIOI!!h thii be
The conference committee Is
scheduled to meet '1\Jesday and did oof discus's H001e State Savli)gs
Bank's proolem with Gov. Richard
Wednesday.
. .
~ Plalicalls fon "cen trall2ed"
"We ate getting close," saki~­ F. Celeste unlll shortly bet~ it
Inspection system under which Paul E. Pfeifer, R- Bucyrus, wbo · clOsed In March, but subiiEQuent
totlsts ln the affected
ties
testimony !ieemed to contradlc~
heads the Senate
. . conferees. "I'm
,
mo
coun
woukl report once a year to centers cautiously optimistic that were that.
operated by. a single priVate g~~lrig to be In a position I(
~mpany ~ contract with the recommending something.''
Pfeifer said the main unresolved
'
state. Any deflclencles would have
1'oda.v
Cloudy
with
a
chance
of
to be corrected by theveblcleowner.
showers or ~~tunderstorms. Hlg~ In
The ~ate Energy, Natural
the . mid, - ~ - Winds ~
Resources and EnVironment Corn·
. northerly abOut 10 mplri'
mlttee has approved a stmnar plan, .
Tonight anlt Tuesday - Mostly
so consklerallon should go swiftly In VeteriiiJII Memorial Hospllal
cloudy
with a !lhanceofshowers and
that chamber once the House bUlls
Nov.9
thunderstorms. Low near 55. High
sent over.
AdmilrlloDs- None.
aro.lnd 70. Winds tonight )lght .
Anti-porn referendum
Dlt!chargrs - Charles Werry,
"
Davkl Tiemeyer, Kenneth Lee, oortheast.
Chance
of
rain
-OOpercenttoday,
lurneddown
Denver Hysell.
40percenttonlghtandTu\?Sday. ,,
Nov.10
CAMBRIDGE; Mass. (UPI) - A ,
ExtendedforeclllliforWetlnet!day·
AdmilrlloDs - Edna Walker,
referendum that wookl ban pornotJu-ouP
Friday - A chance r1 ral!t
graphy and allow clvll penalties In Tuppers P)alns; Wllbur Hanning, Wednesday and ThursdaY, fa ire
attacks found to be caused by Middleport; David Tlemeye\, Friday. Highs In the 50s to mld OOs;
pornographY appeared to be lOsing, · Pomeroy.
WedneSday and Thursday and In the.
D1scJtarRei - Evelyn Mains.
according to jlartlal results.
40sFrlday. Lows In the40stolow50s'
The propolial, which would Umlt
Wednesday and Thursday and In llW
the sale ot sexually orieuted
30s tolow 40s Friday.
mater.lal by defining It as exploitation of wcmen, traDed by a
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Satur·
substantial margin ln partial results
reported Saturday by municipal ~~~~Inning Ohio Lottery

By lEE LEONARD
fees lor the storage ot h~s
UPI stuebclue Reporter
waste, with the proceeds going to
.COLUMBUS (UPI) _ State clean up hazardous waste
lawiliakers 8re to meet tbls week, dumpsltes.
finish up pending business and
Both chambers ·plan to adopt
adjourn untO 198&gt;.
resolutlona ex1endlng the lite of·
The House and Senate reconvene ~al committees studying the
Tuesday, ending a tour- month state's Workers' compensat!DD sys~acatloo. with tl1e PossJblllty of a tem and Investigating last spring's
second week's session it there are sa~andloaDcrlsls.
'snags.
Qulck approval d. the auto
The House Is to ~I at 11 a.m.· · emissions Inspection biD Is needed,
Tuesday,andtheSenateatl:OOp.m. because the U.S. Environmental
l3otll House Speaker Verilal G. Protection Agmcy has lhrealeDed .
RltteJr., D-NewBostou, and Senate ,penalties 1111e6s Ohlomoves IDward
Presklent Paul E. Glllinor, R·Port reducing el!haust tumes In CuyaCUnton, seem, optlml$tlc that the hoga, Lorain, Lake, Hamnton. and
yeai-'sbusinesscanbeeoo~pletedby Butli!r counties by the first ot the
Thursday·
The top priority item Is House BUI
500
kling t
, prov
· or autanoblle exhaust ernlsslons testing In the
Cleveland and CtiiCbmatl areas.
·"Hopefully, we'D bavethatblllon
the lloor WfdiK.Sday or Thursday"
Rille saldlate last week.
'
The Senate wlll be voting on
House-passed legislation Increasing
·

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en tine
1 Section, 10 Pages

Vol. 36, No. 146

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, tuesday. November 12, 1985

Copyrighted I 986

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Nawapeper

.

Weather forecast ·.
'

Hospital news

Lottery wiriners ·

·' .

'. PlANE 'CRASH- A worker IIIIIs 11uwP
-: wretbp ola Piper Cllerolree wlllcll cl'lllhed neat
~ FIInlew, N..J,SunoJa.y. TwopiloU!were mboanlthe

wllich collided In mllhlr wllh a Faklea Jet.:so.
At least live have been ldlied 10d 1M otheralnJured.

ci'aft,

UPI.

Five killed in mid-air crash
b

,

;': - B, GEoRGE ANDBEASSI
~ CLIF'F,SIDE PARK, N.J . (UPI )
t.-" RescUers searched ,the smolder·
Ing rubble ot an apartment buDding
~y tot mon&gt; victims ol a midair
Cornslon betweEn two small planes
that kUied at least five people and
rained fiery delrls on two suburban
ID\vns.
; The corporate Falcon !il jet and
~ private Piper Cherokee propeller plane colllded at 5:25 p.m.
EsT SUnday, authorities said.
: The jet crashed Into an apartment
~lex Ill Clll!slile Park,. burning
live brick bulldlngs ~ one comletely -'- and forcing 90 famllles to
The plane ~ashi!d Into a house
nearby Fairview. A. small fire
out but ail the occupants

tlcaped unbllrmed.. &lt;

: ''It Is iRich a~ area, It's a
(lllracle mon&gt; wei,rot ldlled," said
!!lillie Pollee Capl Joseph Crapai-otta. TIIetwotownsarellladensely
populatEd area cit northern New
~eney just acroas the Hudson River
from New Yorii,Clty,
~ :J]Iose . conllnned dead were
s&gt;te&amp;Ory Miller of Danbury, Conn.,
·and Allen Stell! of Highlands, N.J.,
i~ pOol andco-IJ!Iotofthe jet, owned
by: Nablsco Inc.; Lucia and Henry

...
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Mocha ol Ellenville, N.Y'., pas·
sengers aboard the Cherokee;· and
the pilot of tl1e Cherokee, whose
name was being withheld pending
notification of relatives, officials
said.
Federal Aviation Administration
of(lclals said control tower tapes at
the Teterhoro airport showed each
planes was aware the other was
nearby. Craparotta said the Cherokee tried to dodge the jet but their
wirrgs touched, causing tl1e crash.
Workers -with heavy equipment
today bfgan clearing and checking
tl1e d!ibriS d. the three-family home
ln Cliffside .Park hlt directly by the
jet. The apartmen~ INUdlng was
demolished by the crash and
ensulngfire, Craparotta said.
Autborttles accounted '!or aU but
one ot the occupantsoftbat buDding
and for aU those Uvlng In the four
nelghbprlng buUdlngs set ablaze.
O!flclals reared the one missing
occupant was killed, Craparotta
said.
The missing person was !dent !tied
as AblaUa Taha. 34, who lived in the
house directly hit by the jet. His
family tllld pollee they believed he
was Inside his apartment when the
jet crashe~, said Cliffside Pollee

oftlclals.
' About 100, ptWle begau counting
paper ballola by haJK! ln.a sChool
gymnasium on Thursday but,
because of Cambridge's compUcated electoral process, llnal results
were not expected untO today at the
earliest.
.
With· six of the city's 11 wards
counted by Saturday atterooon, the
vote was 6,622- 4,683 against the
referendum.
The proposal defines pornography as "a systematic practice of
eicploltation and suhordlnatlon,
based on sex, which harms
women.••

Capt. Russell Nelson.
One witness to the crash, the Rev.
John Biermann, sald',Jie·was Inside
Our Lady of Grace Roman CathoUc
Church ln FairVIew, when be heard
a whlstllng sound over the church
and then two explosions.
"It looked like tl1e end of t11e
world: ' Biermann said. "There
were !Ires au over the place,
electrical wires were down and the
Hghts across the street went out," he
said.
National Transportation Safety

rr:;:=::;;==;;;;==;;;;:;:t
To all the People
=~:::'to~ $1,448,1119. who voted for
withapayolrdueof$611,577.!il.
me N'_o.v: 5 for
Lolto- 2, 5, 7, 28, 32, 40.
Lotto ucket sales totaled
Salisbury Town$3,6'17.~. - dmclals of the Ohio Lottery
Commission Increased the jackPot
shI•p Tru stee my
for Wednesday night's Ohio Lotto
Sl"·ncere thanks. '
jackpot to $3.1 mllllon Sunday after
r ;

I

findlng

no winning tickets from

Saturdaynlght's draw!ng.
However, btflclals sald392 tlckels
had five of the winning numbers
whlcti mean their holders get $104.
The 16,068 tickets tht have !ourofthe
winning numbers prOduced $45 lor
tbelr hoklers.

GEORGE s.
HOBSTETTER
•

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·;
Pd. for by tbt Cllldiclltt. ·
- Zl9 • 3rd AYt. I
011.

IT'S

BoardandFederalAvi~tionAdmln ·

lstration officials examined both
crash sites. NTSB Ch.a!rman Jim
Burnett also planned ioexamine the
sites today, said board spokesman

ol

Ira Furman.

The Falcon 00 Will\ hound for
Teterboro Airport from Momstown, olllc\als said. The· Piper
Cherokee left Essex County Airport
In Caldwell, N.J.
Two women were Injured as the
jet crashed In CUirslde. Ann
Sevenjka. 49. was taken to Montetlore Hospital In New York with
severe hand lnJunes. Josephine
Esposito, 39, was , admitted to
Palisades General Hospital with a
fractured hlp.

WASHERS '
AND·DRYERS

.

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Nation salutes
all war veterans
.

'

By PAM MURPHY
•• "":. U.llled Pre!!s lntematlonal
The nation saluted Its war
veterans !rom coast to coast with
parades and solemn ceremonies on
Veterans Day, paying tribute to
soldiers missing In action in
Southeast Asia but provoking a
controversy over gay servicemen.
Presldeot Reagan placed a
wreath at the Tomb ofthe Unknown
Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery across the Potomac River from
Washington. He addressed a hushed
crowd of almost6,\XXland memorial·
\zed those who died In wars and
terroriSt attacks as "victims of a
peace process that failed .
"Today as never before, we must
pledge to remember the I hlngs that
will continue the peace," said
Reagan, hi s voice choked with
emotion. "Weakness, after all, is a
temptation. It tempts the pugnacious to assert themselves. But
strength Is a declaration that cannot
be misunderstood."
Brltian's Prince Charles and
Princess Diana of Wales visited the
cemetery a lew hours later. Charles
left a wreath of red, white and blue
Dowers at the Unknown Soldier's
tomb and saluted while a trumpeter
played taps.

Thousands paid their respects at
the" black-slab Vietnam Veterans
Memorial on The Mall In Washington, seeklngfamlllar names among
the :il,022 listed war dead. Virginia
Gov. Charles Robb was the keynote
speaker for ceremonies,
Mayor Edward Koch upbraided
AmeriCan Legion ofDcials lor makIng an "error in judgment" by
preventing gay groups from marchIng In the Veteran's Day Parade In
New York City. He later met with
gay veterans in Madison Square
Park.
In a West Hollywood parade, the
first ever to honor homosexual
veterans, about 100 veterans and a
bandtu lof politicians marched from
City Hall to a park on San Vicente
Boulevard. Ahou taklpeople, mostly
male couples, watched from the
sidewalk.
Vietnam veteran Gino Casanova,
34. completed tl1e 27th day of a
planned. 61-day fast Monday In a
7-by-Hoot "tiger cage" to call
attention to 61 servicemen !rom
Washington state st 01 listed as
missing In action in Vietnam.
Casanova Is fast ing In the tarpcovered cage In the middle of a cow
pasture near Kent, Wash., some ro
miles south of Seattle.

'

(;orbachev
to publish book in U.S.
..
::

VEI'ERANS DAY SALUTE - Followlrig the command of the
sergeant-at-anns, members of Pomeroy's Drew Webster Post 38 fll the
American Legion tired a salute to !merlca's senolce men and women
who lost their llves whUe delendlng their OOUN!"Y when It needed
defending. Veterans Day was remembered In Pomeroy with an
Impressive service on the steps of the counhouse. Speaker lor the
occasion was Frank V augltari. Also taking part In the service were
Father Anthony Glannamore, of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church,
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler and Joe Struble presided over lite
program.

Byl!ll'l11ERPESSIN

: NEW YORK (UPI) - Soviet
leader MlkhaU Gorbachev pledges
ius c&amp;ntry wtllneverstarta war In a
book outUnlng his views on foreign
~~Clicy thai wW arrtve In U.S.
bookstores , ftve days before his
summit meeting with President
·
,
Reagan.
But the volume, titled "A Tlmefor
Fuce," Is not expected to appear In
the Soviet Union until FebruarY, the
publisher said Sunday.
&amp;ewart Rlchar4son of the New
Yoril publishing compan:l Richard·
illll &amp; Steirman, saki the U.S.
~twas unaware the book
was being prepared and pubU.hed.
He saki the312-page bouk Is made
~p primarlly oftextsof speeches the
Soviet leader made this year,
translated Into Engllsh.
A passage In the 12-page tOO.
grapby, added In recent days,
however, 'declares: "Peace Is tl1e
most Important goal of the Commu'\!St.Party aud the Soviet state. This
J4 demOnSirBIEd by MlkhaU Gorba·
chi!Y'slliUllltlnCel1lt, In the nan'le
11 !be Soviet leadership,and JEOPle,
Ill'tit wiD never originate war In the
Soviet Union and tbeSovlet statewlll
Qt!Yer start a war."
,,'111e book also contlilns unpubUihed mateiial. In a five- page
lfttrotluctlon and color pbotograpbii
~ Gorbllehev and Ills t~, some

from tl1e Soviet leader's private
collection, Richardson said.
Richardson said 25,\XXl copies
would arrive In bookstores In the
United States Nov. 14, five days
before the Genl"Va, Switzerland,
summit. The book contains Gorbachev' s views on some issues that wlll
be discussed at tl1e meeting,
Including Reagan's "Star Wars"
defense ~ystern .
In the Introduction, Gorbachev
talks about keeping weapons out of
space.
"I would also Uke to draw your

,,
I

attention to our latest proposals: to
reduce nuclear armaments capable
d. ~chlng each other's territories
by 00 percent it both sides completely prohibit space-based strike
weapons; and also Irrespective of
this reduction, to reduce mediumrange nuclear weaporls substan·
tlally In Europe," be wrote.
"All of this, of course, Is subject to
the strict obserVation d. tl1e principle of equal security and to
verification by aU necessary measures agreed upon through B?gotla·
t!Dn," he said.
•

Council members, Dewey Horton
and Robert Gilmore, were named to
serve one year terms on the
Middleport Firemen's Dependency
Board when Middleport Vlllage
Council met In regular session
Monday night.
Council approved the report of
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck showing ·
receipts of $7054 In lines and lees for
the ot!lce of Mayor Fred Hollman
during October and a gift of$500to be
used In the development of the new
Dave DUes Park from the Dave
ones App;llachlan Golf Touma ·
men! was acknowledged.
Mayor Hoffman extended thanks
to voters of the town for the support
of a one mlll current expense levy In
the November election. The add\·
tiona) levy wlll be used to pay for
street fighting. Mayor Hoffman
commented that voters of the town
always are supportive w!!fn need Is
demonstrated to them. He reported
that a new one mill recreation levy
had gone done to defeat by a small

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI)- The Ohio
Board of ~nts has proposed $3)5
mllllon worth of spending du rlngthe
next two years on building projects
at Ohio's college and university
campuses- mainly for renovation
and replacement.
The recommended 1987-88capltal
budget, adopted Monday by the
board, Is part of an $889 mUllon
six-year outlay planned by the
regents.
Chancellor WI!Uam B. Coulter
said the Initial two-year phase Is
"right in the ballpark" with what the
administration of Gov. Richard F.
Celeste estimates can be afforded.
"These budget recommendations
to the governor and the General
Assembly address our Institutions'
pressing needs to renovateexlsUng
buildings and adapt facUlt ies to
meet technological developments,"
said Coulter.
The regents' two-year plan wlll be

8 lEE LEONARD
Y
UPI State~ Reporter

WHIRLPOOL MODEL LE/G5700XP ELECTRIC/GAS
AUTOMATIC DRYER

FlEE
DELIVERY
&amp; SET UP,

ELBERFELDS

munlcations Group which provides
television ca ble service to the town ,
was jX'esentagalnlast night. Hoover
Inquired If Mayor Hortman or
council had received any Information as a result of the last meeting
when a representallve of the
company met with council and
Hoover to discuss problems.
Mayor Hoffman said tha) a
company representative was to
have gotten back to him but had not
doB? so at this point. Mayor
Hoffman said he would make a
contact with the company.
Councllman James Clatworthy
brought up· lor discusskln the
possible need of a traffic signal light
on North Second nea r Hudson St.
which might be needed due to thp
upcoming opening of a new res taurant nt&gt;ar the location. Council and
Pollee Cijlef Sid Little acknowledged that trat!lc Is heavy In the
location wit h Chief Little reporting
that It Is especially heavy !rom the

first to the eighth of each month ana
that the location has been tl1e scene
of three accidents In the past month.
CouiiCU agreed to look over the
traffic problem at the location
although some felt that an accurate
study cannot be made until the
restaurant Is constructed and qJen
lor business.
At the suggestion of Councllman
Gilmore, It was agreed to look Into
the posslblllty of renting the
vlllage-owned lot at tl1e corner of
Third and Ga rfleld. The lot, given to
the village by Mary Ell2abeth
Hart~rTbo~ . wasadvertmed

lor sale' recently wrno bids were
received. Gilmore also asked about
the town'sannexation plan and was
advised that Mayor Hot!man will be
In touch with Attorney Steve Story
about the matter.
Attending were Mayor Hot!man,
Clerk Buck, Councilmen Horton,
Satterfield, Gilmore, Clatworihy
and William Walters.
·

Propose $3_0 5 million for Ohio _projects

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
Richard F. Celeste says he's
confident that the peopleo!Ohlo will
judge his administration "head and
shoulders" ahove that of former
Republican Gov. James A. Rhodes
when they go to vote next year.
But just to make sure, Celeste

-

margin and Indicated that recreational activities will have to be
reduced unless some plan Is devised
lor Increasing recreational funds.
Council approved Increasing the
revenue sharing appropriation a
total of $3,756 so that It can be used
durtng the last two months of the
year, If needed, and gave a first
reading to an ordinance which will
provide Christmas bonuses lor ·
employes. Full tlme employes wlll
receive $150 and part-time workers
will receive $75. Cost to the vlllage
will be $3,001. •The amount of the
bonuses Is the same as given by the
town last year.
.
A meeting of the fin ance commlltee with the mayor was set for next
Monday night. Members of that
committee are Jack Sa tterfleld,
Hort.on and Gilmore.
Robert Hoover, a resident who
has appeared before council prev1ously to complain ahout various
aspects to the Consolldati&gt;d Com-

submitted to the Office of Budget
and Management and the Ohio
General Assembly lor approval
next year. The $889 million six-year
plan includes requests from the
colleges which the regents thought
could be postponed.
Colleges and universities received $320 million In const ruction
fund s lor the current IMJ· year
period.
Should the General Assembly
decide to spend more on higher
ed ucation , the regents threw In
another$'!'/ mUUon worth of·'quality
enhancement" projects lor fiscal
1987·88.
But both Coulter and Richard L.
Krabach, president of the regents,
cautlooed that too ambitious a
buDding program would require
excessive opera tlng funds to pay off
funds, thus diminishing co llege and
university programs.
"I don't want peop\e tothlnkthls\s "
free money," said Krabach. "It's
got to be paid," adding tha t the

hoard is "absolu tely opposed" to
higher tuition for students.
Coulter said mucho!themoney 45 percent during 111' first two years
- will go toward renovation and
replacement of existing facilities
which are eithlir worn out or need to
be remodeled to accommodate new
needs and technologies.
Another $57 m\Uion will be set
aside for replacing classroom and
\ahoratory equipment at all cam·
puses, he said .
Coulter said new space Is needed
to teach the growing fields of
business, computer science and
engineering.
·
He said some of the recommended projects wUI tle In with the
Celeste administration's emphasis
on economic development and job
training.
For example, $7 ml!Uon in
Included for construction of a
polymer science building at the
University of Akron, and$10mlllion
for a job training center at Sinclair
Com munity College.

The long-range plan includes $15
million lor a high- technology
welding engineering building at
Ohio State University, but not until
1991-92.
The Initial two-year outlay calls
lor $10 mill ion lor asbestos removal
from college buUdlngs, and $15
million for data processing
equipment.
By program. $139 million Is for
removatlon and replacement, $75.6
mUIIon-lor new construction, $~. 6
million lor medical facilities and
. $6.3 mllllon for site development.
The top priority $195 million for
the major state universities would
break down as follows: Ohio State,
$41.7 million; Cincinnati. $'!/.7 ·
mllllon; A)&lt;ron,$20.3 mllllon; Cleveland State, $19 million; Bowling
Green, $15.7 million; Wright Stat~.
$12.9 million; Toledo, $12.5 million;
Ohio University, $12.4 million; Kent
State, $12.3 million; Miami, $10.8
million; Central State, $5.2 million;
and Youngstown Sta te, $4 million.

Celeste confident, lashes back at Jim Rhodes

WHIRLPOOL MODEL L.As4ooXP
· DESIGN 2000®AUTOMATIC .
WASHER

Administration realistic
argumentauve.discusslons of their
By NORMAN D. SANDLER
dllrerences
when they meet Nov. :J9.
WASHINGTON (UPI) •- The
ro
In
Geneva,
,Switzerland.
final countdown to the superpower
summit Is on and President Reagan
"We bope tbatlherewlllcome out
and his sentor advisers agree the
meeting may result In only Incre- ot this a mbre 'constructlvt.&gt; aud
mental progress toward better stable kind ~ relatiOnshiP." Secretary ot State George Shultz saki
U.S.-Sovlet relations.
Sunilay,
"butltremalns to be seen."
· With the summit elghtdays away,
admlnlstrallon r1tlclals have all but
ruled out any material sign of
Shultz and other officials saki
success, such as an arms control Reagan Is prepared to meet Soviet
agreement or a Jolnt communique crit!Clsm head on and fire back with
outlining the barest areas of his DWrJ view d. howSOvletactlonsln
a:rea!ll'llllging tron'arrns control to
agreement.
The expectation Is that Reagan . regional corinlcts have soured
and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorha· relations between' Washington and
chev will engage in frank and even Moscow'.

Appoint Horton, Gilmore to board post~

plans to spend the next 12 months
reminding Ohioans how Rhodes
"heaped a mountain of debt" on the
state.
Celeste, celebrating his 48th
birthday, was asked by reporters
Monday how he plans to defend
agalnst the charges of Rhodes and
other Republicans that he is running
an unethical administration in view
or investigations Into polltlcal hir·

lng, promot ion and contracting
practices In the Ohio Department of
Transportation.

"The rea l choice In 198615 going to
be based on performance," said the
governor. "I think one reason Why
they are spending 9:&gt; much a their
time on the Department of Transportatlon and Its jobs Is because In
tenns of an economic program to
put Ohioans back to work, or

achievements In ellucation,, or
gett ing a real handle on ut il ity rates
or controlling ht•alth care costs, the
Celeste admlnlstra tion Is head and
shoulrn;~s above what Oh loans had
before.
.
Celeste dt&gt;cltnctl to reply speclftca lly to charges leveled by Rhodes
that t~ administration l• ."act in~
like tt.!y have a stolen credtt card
and Is .: ·~ tea llng from the
taxpayers.

Rio Grande enrollment "stable' in fall, reports records office
RIO GRANDE - Rlo Grande
College and Community College's
1 fall quarter enrollment remained
,,,.,... stable this year.
Figures released by the college's
Records O!llce whow current enrollment at 1,003. Last year the college
bad a fall quarter headcount ot1,607.
There was an Increase In tuU-tlme
OBSERVE VETERANS DAY- Pmce Olarletllays a wreath at the
equivalents- the units used by the
Tomb d. the UnlalownS at ArllniiOD National Cemetery In oi!Bervance
state to calculate educational
~ Veterans Day Monday. (UPI).
subsidy.

According to the college's Office
of lntonnatlon Services, the Rio
Grande enrollment Is "consistent
with private colleges and commlllllt y colleges slatewlde."
The Association of 1ndependent
Colleges and Universities In Ohio
reports that statewide Its 43
member lnstltltutions recorded a
decrease In fall enrollment of
sUghtly more than one percent
rSL046 to 86.043ln 1~1 .

The Ohio Board or Regents
preliminary fa ll quarter f'llrollment
statistics lor. Ohio community
colleges report adecreaseofsllghtly
more than one percent r 65,7JB In 1984
to64,770\n 1985) .
Rio Grande College's enrollment
Is 412 and the conununlty college
headcount Is 1,191. There are 1,116
commuters and 487 residents.
Seventy-lour or Ohio's 88 count ies
and eight foreign countries are

PO.IOY

represented by students.
Tht&gt; communltycollege In-district
distribu tion Is: Call\a, 367; Jackson,
221; Meigs, 112; and, Vi nton, 72.
There are a total or 772 in-district
students.
There are 419 out -of-district
students In the community college.
Rio Grande College has 352
students !rom Ohio, l4 !rom other
states and 46 !rom ot her countries,.

\J

If
(

�Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

r'T'-OL--.- ........... c::l ....

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

Tuesday, N~ber12. 1985

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
LETTERS OF OPINJON arE" ~·eJcomE' . They should b£&gt; less tha n 300 words
long. AJ!Ietters are subjectloed\!!ng and must be signed wllh name, address and
telephone numbrr. No unsigned letiE"rs wlll be published . Letters should be In
good taste, addressing ls'su(&gt;s, not persona ll!l es.

WASHINGTON - A few weeks
ago, during debate CNer the deficit
reduction -bUI, Oklahoma's Sen.
David Boren offered a modest
proposal. He moved to limit future
cost·ct-llvlng adjustments lor Social Security retirees to 3 percent,
even lf the rateoflnfiation should be
4 or 5 percent. .
For a retired couple gettlng$'100 a
month In benefits, this would mean
a monthly Increase Qf $211nstead of
$28 or $35. I wrote a column stoutly
defending Boren's amendment.
Under an avalanche of maU, the
rooffellln. A gentleman In Ashland,
Ky., wrote that my column was

baloney, and a gentlewoman In
Peabody, Mass .. called It humbug.
Those were the nicest things ·that
were said.
Two common themes tan
through the letters: We paid for this
Insurance and · you can't take It
from us. Second, Social Security
benefits are oot really _goverrunent
"spending," bec~use benefits are
paid from a trust fund that Is
separate and apart trom · the
general fund:
· Myths die bard. Social Security Is
not "Insurance" In the ordlnaty
sense of the word. There is no "trust
fund" as the term Is generally

understood. When will these elementary truths be accepted? Social
Securlty Is a simple and almost
Immediate transfer ct Income from
those who are working to those who
are not working. The taxes that
were paid by most of toda¥'s
retirees long ago were expended. It
Is the young and middle-aged
workers who al'e su pportlng tIll old
folks.
Many &lt;:i my correspondents gave
me details on their household
~dgets ~ how much for food,
clothing, upkeep of a car, drugs
from the pharmacy. They're pit·
!fully hard up. Of the 36 million

win, lose &amp; DREW

Reagan: remove this
blot from the U.N.
Ten years after the U.N. General Assembly voted iiir a resolution
equating Zionism with racism, Presl(jent Reagan pledged his Slpport for
"relnoval of this blot from the United Nations' record."
Reagan's view was read Sunday to l,tro American Jews at a conference
cubnlnatlng a daylong protest and seminar led by Sen. Daniel Patrick
MQYDihan, 0-N.Y.. Israeli Ambassador Benjamin Netanyahu and U.S.
Ambassador Vernon Walters.
Moynihan was chief U.S. delegate to the assembly wll!n It adopted the
resOlution that "determines that' Zionism Is a form ct racism and racial
discrimination."
ij.eagan's message said three American presidents have supported
MoYnihan's pledge 10 years ago that the "United States ~ not
acknowledge, It will never abide by, It will never acquiesce In this Infamous
act."
..Today," Reagan said, "I am proud to reafflnn that promise and
further, to pledge my support for the removal &lt;:i this blot from the United
Nations' reconl."
· Netanyahu said last week the JXlSSibUIIy of rescinding the resolution by
the General Assembly was under study.
·
was
approved
on
Nov.
10,
1975,
by
a
72-35
wte,
with
32
The resolution
,.
abstentions.
The assembly that day also approved two resolutions supporting the
Palestine Liberation Organization- one to Include the PLO In any Middle
East peace talks and another to establish a :!l-nation U.N. cornmlnee to
promote creation of an Independent Palestinian state.
M.'r. Mehdi, president of the American Arab Relations Committee In
New York, denounced efforis to rescind the anti- Zionist resolution and
called Zionism "a political movement" that wrongly claims Jews have a
right to oCcupy Palestine.
"This Is a racist doctrine which stretches over 3,(XX)years," he told Cable
News Network. "Furthermore It is an aggressive racist movement and Its
victims are the prople of Palestine. whose land has been occupied by the
Zionists."
Moynihan told the conference that the resolution's passage was "an
obscene act."
Walters said It set the stage tor a revival of anti-Semitism and
undermining of the legitimacy of the state of Israel.
"In fact, ZioniSm ts a movement of national Uberatlon and
self-determination," he said. "Those who attack Zionism want to polson
the moral atmosphere of the West.
"Zionism has become a new red nag which Is used to a host of
International meetings and assemblles, diverting attention away from
genuine problems. I need hardly tell you that this Is particularly useful for
the Soviet Union and Its allies."
Calling tbe resolution a "license to kUI, " Netanyahu told the conference:
"Make no mistake about It. The libel 'Zionism equals racism' Is the same
libel spread by the Nazis. It Is thhe same vile and murderous antiSemitism dressed up In trendy terminology."

Qy MIKE RABUN

to Steve Watson.
UPI Sports Writer
And there were plenty t:l other big
DENVER (UPI) - Unlike last plays, such as:
year's Monday night game which
-Ray Werschlng's 45-yard field
was played In a blizzard, the one goal with 3: 46 to play that appeared
conducted at Mile High Stadium In to have brought the 49ers the
1985 wUI not be remembered for a victoty.
snowstorm.
-A 5Q.yard "fiea Dicker" pass
Instead, It wUI he remembered for from Elway to · Vance Johnson
a single snowball.
which set up the second of Elway's
It was tossed by an anonymous two first-hal! touchdown throws.
Denver Broncos fan with 17 S€Cilnds
- Ronnie Lott's stop of Sammy
left In the first half and ultimately; It Winder 'at the goal line which kept
could be argued, that snowhall Denver off the scoreboanl In the
decided a game filled with oddities third quarter.
.
and big plays.
- And · a decision by San
The official game winner was a Francisco coach BUI Walsh to go for
24-yanl field goal by Denver's Rich a 'touchdown on 4th-and-2 In the
Karlls with 1: Tl to playthatbrought second quarter that backfired when
tbe Broncos a 17-16 victory CNer the Roger Craig was stopped short of
San Francisco 49ers and gave them the goal line.
But It was the "snowball" play
sole possession of the AFCWest lead
at 7-3. The Super Bowl champion which will live on from a frigid
49ers, meanwhile, fell to 5-5 and evening In whlc~ the chill factor
placed themselves In jeopardy of . dipped below 10 degrees.
WlththeBroncosleadlng,14-3, the
missing the playoffs.
Karlls' neldgoal was setup by two 49ers had a 4th-and-lsltuatlon at the
king-sized plays - a 42- yard Denver 2. Having failed In a
Interference penalty against the touchdown gamble earlier In the
49ers' Dwight Hicks and a despera- game, Walsh ordered a field goal.
tlon22·yard throw from John Elway
But just before the ball was

retirees, an estimated 5.4 million
rely solely upon their Social
Security checks. Their Indignation
Is understandable.
.
But who are !'he poor In America
today? It's not the old folks, It's the
young. Ater meeting necessities,
the typical oldster has disposable
income of about $4,100 a year. The
worker between~ and34 has about
$1,000. For the next 30 or 40 years,
these workers wUI be hit -and hit,
and hit - with heavy Social .
Security taxes to ·pay benefits to .
their parents and grandparents.
Many retirees may have lost · .
track of what they paid and they
may not be fully aware rt. what lies .
In store for their working sons and
daughters. In 1937, the ftrst year
that Social Security taxes were
collected, the total maximum tax
paid by the Individual worker was
precisely $30- 1 percent of wages
up to$3,&lt;XXl. Twenty years later, the
maximum was $!4.00 - 2.25
percent of wages up to $4,:W. By
1977 the maximum tax had grown . ·
to$965.25. Tills yearltls$2,791. Next
year, It ,wlll be $3,003.
Suppose a worker began paying- ·
the maximum tax In 1937 and
continued to pay the maximum tax
through 1985. He retires at 65 on
Jan. 1; 1986. Over his 48 years In the
labor force, he has paid a little less
than $25,tro In taxes. His employer
has rna tched tre sum. He will now
draw down benefits of SS,!lil! a year.
He will recover his own taxes In
three years, the oomblned taxes Iii
six years. Even lf you calculate
compound Interest, this retiree has
a good thing going. An!) his llfe
expectancy Is to reach 82 -17 years
on down the line.
·
Where do you think the money
will have to come from to keep up
the gentleman's pension? It can't
coine from the taxes he and his
employer have paid.

"You're just as blind eltll!r way."
As a sort of consolation prize,
thanks to Dorgan's efforts, Sortland
will Ill awarded a Bronze Star In a
ceremony at a North Dakota air
base next rmnth. "People like Sam
haven't asked for much," Dorgan
told our reporter Jenny Cunningham. "The little / things are
Important. They demonstrate that
this country doesn't forget."
This cheery view rliight he
· disputed by some veterans. Rep.
Barbara Boxer, 0-Callf., asked for
a General Accounting Office loves·
ligation when sbe learned that a
constituent had been waiting 40
years to receive the 14 medals he
bad earned In World War II.
The GAOreporied that a surge of
requests following publication of
two magazine articles had resulted
· In a backlog of 114,000 applications
for medals In 1983. .
AlthOugh the GAO found tbat the
distribution program has Improved

By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sports Wrller
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) Pitcher Bret Saberhagen of the
Kansas City Royals experienced the
third or fourth greatest thrlll ct his
young life Monday.
Saberhagen lsn'tqultesurewhere
his winning the Cy Young Award
Monday !Its on his list of lifetime
thrllls- but he Is sure It's not In the
top two. It just can't compete with
his becoming a father on Oct. 26 and
his winning a World Series on Oct.
27.
So Saberhagen lumps the Cy
Young Award with winning ~

"Are you all together or do you want separate checks?"

Today in history
T~Y Is Tuesday, Nov. 12, the 316th day of 1985 with 49 to follow.
The moon Is new.
The morning stars ar&lt;' Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are Mercury, Saturn and JupltPr.
Those born on this datP ar&lt;' under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
F'rellch physicist Jacques Charles In 1746; Chinese nationalist ;~
revolutlonarv Sun Yat-sen In 1BOO; actress Kim Hunter In 1922 (age l.
PrincesS Grace of Monaco, former American movie star Grace Kelly, In
1929; actress Stephanie Powers In '1942 (age 43!, and rock musician Nell
Young In 1945 (age 40) .

slgnlflcantly since then, It warned
that a change recently proposed
could create another big backlog.
As things stand' now, too Army
processes requests from Its own
veterans, while those who served In
the Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps
and Coast Guard are handled by the
records center ct till National
Archives. Acting archivist Frank
Burke said too records center
wants to hand the responslbUity
back to the military services.
'"We were wondering, as archivists, what we are doing In medals,
anyway," Burke said. He added •
that Archives has taken a lot ct ooat
from veterans and their families
because of delays ·that oo said
aren't the records center's fault.
The Navy has agreed to begin
processing medal requests for
Itself, the Marine Corps and Coast
Guard by Dec. 1. The Air Force is
thinking It over-.

ClJI this date In history:

In 1941. the Geman army's drive to take Moscow was halted by the
RuSsians on the outskirts of the Soviet capital.
In 1948, a war crimes tribunal In Japan sentenced former premier Tojo
and' six world war n colleagues to die by hanglllg . .
· 1~ 191ll, The Voyager 1 spacecraft passed Saturn, lransmlttlng new
Information on the planet's rings and moons.
1 1982 Former KGB chief Yurt Andropov succeeded the late LEonid
~~ as general secretary of the Soviet Communist Party. Polish
authoritieS freed Solidarity founder Lech Walesa after 11 rmnths of

Browns still ' keeping
the faith' in Kosar
By ROBERTO DIAS

Internment.
/li. thought lor the day: Chinese nationalist Sun y at-sen sa ld·· "In the
n rJ a country, It Is not the practical workers but the Idealists
constructlo
Od"
and planners whO are difficult to n .

HIGHER LEARNING

· The most educated countrz"es

.

.

'=-==-:-"'":':':-:::::-:-------.....:.----.Y

I

I

.r.

II

games and being named tbe most
valuable player of tbe World Series.
"No. 1 is definitely my son, Drew
WUllam;" Saberhagen said. "He's
been the greatest tllrUI thatl've had.
Winning the World Series was next.
Winning 20 grimes was close - lf I
hadn't won 20 games, I wouldn't
have gotten the Cy Young. Winning
the (World Series) MVP was also
close. You reallycan'tputoneahead
of the other. They are all close
together. It's just been a picturebook year for me."
Saberhagen rebounded from his
1().ll rookie season to become the
Dtth youngest pitcher In major-

.
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Three . closet.
"They've been thtough a lot,"
weeks ago, the Cincinnati Bengals
were 2-5 and at the bottom of the says Bengals' coach Sam. Wyche.
"They deserve thechancetoenjoy It
AFC Central division. The _embara
unJe."
rassed players were talking about
Cincinnati's third straight win
doing their grocery shopping at
midnight so they wooldn't be was a convincing 27-10 conquest of
the Cleveland Browns Sunday.
spotted . .
"We've excited ourselves all over
Today, the Ben gals are on a
again,"
said Bengals' cornerback
three-game winning streak,
perched atop the division standings Louis Breeden. "We've recaptured
and the players have come out of the the type of excitement we had

hard-nosed yet lair treaty I and that Intricacies of the arms-control
there Is no _good treaty possible.
Mr. President, It's a powerful Is a conceivable thought), then the game. You're the only one you
view, held with conviction by true test of the Amerlcan political sbould trust. I know It's not your
respected people both In and oot of system Is to show Itself strong style to get Into the retails ci JXlllcy. ·
·your administration. They see the enough to promote such a deal and But on this Issue, you'd retter.
old patterns forming again: pres- stick by it.
Otll!rwlse you may get mugged by
The only way to convince your either side.
sure against Star Wars ,
apocalypse-mongering, and so on. friends Is to personally learn the full
They ask: Can a president elected
as a tough guy, hang tough? They
relieve that while you mean well,
you are not yet sufllclently knowledgeable about arms control and
therefore you can be manipulated.
The clOset-llberal manipulators,
say the hawks, are doing their stilff
everywrere, right Inside your
allegedly hawkish administration.
o/o OF PEOPLE 25 AND UP
It's a dangerous view to leave
HAVING SOME COLLEGE EDUCATION
unanswered. ll, by some chance,
the Soviets should prove to Ill
willing to cut tre cards and start
dealing, the hawks will be able to
undercut your position by saying
we're negotiating from weakness.
How can you cope with II? At Its
root, the hawk case Is fiawed. But
only you can prove that In a way
they will accept.
Their case Is based oo one core
Eaat
thought: that the fUture wUI
Germ1ny
resemble the past. That may be
true In physics, but not In polltlcs.
The 1!8ls are mt the 1970s.
VIetnam breast-beating Is CNer. We
have raised our military spending.
A president has been elected and
re-elected on the propoSition that
America ought to be more muscular. Politicians are desperate not to
'
appear "soft" on defense Issues. ·
There's a paradox at work here:
It's Important that you prove your
tough friends wrong, by showing
15.5%
14.5%
them you can be just as tough as
Japan
Sweden
you want to be. Youkno.w, the Issue
''
at hand goeS beyood arms control; 1 - : u.s. Clnluo _ ,
NIAIWIIitMr v-,..
It's whether dermcracles can tunc· The United States ranks highest In higher education. About 32 perc:ent of · ·
tlon In the crunch. After all, lf the U.S. adults have at least some college education _ nearly twlc:e the permind of man can conceive a c:entage of East Germany, which ranks second.
·'•
.f
'

a

Lang' and 6 yards to Watson while
the 49ers had come up with a 26-yard
field goal by Werschlng.
The 49ers closed the deficit In the
second half -with a 13-yard touchdown throw from Joe Montana to
Mike Wilson and a22-yardfleld goal
by Werschlng. San Francisco later
went ahead on Werschlng's 45yarder.
Denver tll!n movedtothewlnnlng
field goal courtesy of the lnterfer-.
ence penalty on Hicks and the
22-yard throw from Elway to
Watson.
·
Hicks was called for Interference
against Walson on a play In which
the defender appeared to shield the
receiver from tre ball without
making a play for it.
"It wasn't Interference," said
Hicks. "It wasn't faceguardlng. It
·wasn't anything but an Incomplete
pass.
"The receiver didn't have . a
chance to catch the pass and !wasn't
exactly waving my hands."
Denver's defense llmlted Montana
to 17 completions In 40attempts and
San Francisco converted just one of
16 third down plays.

• !.

""

.'
KICKS WINNER- Denver's Rich Karlls Icenter) Is hugged by Mark • ~
Cooper (left) and Clarence Kay (right) after ldcklngthge winning field • ~
goal In the closing minutes llist night against San F1anclsro In Denver.
The Broncos won 17-16. UPI.
~

Byars to sit out again

.

third quarter. but Northwestern ...
By GENE CADDES
refUsed todle.
UPI Sports Writer
"ll we were In New York or Los
league history to win aJ games. He
"Northwestern rea lly did a gooq .
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(UP!)
-Kelt
h
finished :a&gt;- 6 for the Royals and was Angeles," Saberhag~n said, "there
job,"
said Bruce. "Their quarter- . .
Byars,
Ohio
State's
AllAmerica
an easy winner Monday In the would have been a lot more
back,
Mike Greenfield, Is a fine "
American League Cy Young ballot- publlclzed about our starting rota- taUback, Is likely to sit out yet
player.
They ran the ba~ hard and ..
Ing rNer 22-game winner Ron tion. In my eyes, It's the rest starting another game Saturday when the did a good job execu tlng. When we ·· ·
rotation In major-league baseball. Buckeyes host old nemesis Wlscon·
GuldJy of the New York Yankees.
committed our two turnovers, they .".
Sa.berhagen, who also won two It's solid from the No. 1 through No. sin, Coach Earle Bruce said were able to capitalize and put "
Monday.
games In the World Series, received 5.
, ,
"We're playing Keith Byars points oo the scoreboard."
"Evecybody plckedupthelrshare
23 of the 28 first-place votes to
Bruce
said
Unebacker
Thomas
.:·
of the load - pennant stretch, week-by-week and day-by-day until
outdistance the runnerup Guidry,
playoffs, World Series. It seemed we find out just how he's doing," "Pepper" Johnson, with 11 tackles: •
127 points to 88.
was the defen sive player of the •
Saberhagen led a Kansas City llke whenever oneofthe starters had Bruce said at his weekly press Northwestern game.
·· '
assault on the Cy Young balloting. to come through, they came luncheon.
.
The
offensive
player
of
till
game
. .
"I can't say Keith Is showing any
Fireman' of the Year Da.n Qulsen· through.lf It wasn't for em starting
Karsatos,
wbo
completed
16
d.
··
was
berry finished third In the voting and rotation, I don't think we would have Improvement untll I see him run.
20 passes for 275 yards and !brei: -.,
17-game winner Charlie Lelbrandt been where we were. I don't think He's got soreness In the foot and touchdowns, one of them a 75-yard . .
cannot
put
a
lot
of
pressure
on
lt."
·
we'd have won too World Series."
fifth .
.
Byars, the Buckeyes' 6-2, 235· bomb to Oanker Mike Lanese.
Bruce
said
reserve
defensive
pound tailback, broke a bone In his
right foot on Labor Day. He sat out back Ray Jackson, who suffered a .
the first five games, but gained shoulder dislocation against ·.• '
more than 100 yards against Northwestern, would be lost to the :_
during training camp.
Cousineau, "Eslason Is an out stand· Punlue. He relnjured the foot the Buckeyes for the remainder of the :.
, •
"It's s.omethlng I think we lost lng quarterback right now. He following week against Minnesota regular season.
Also banged up but expected to be ., :
after our first loss, and It sure feels moves well, he throws well and he_ and missed the last two contests.
ready
for Wisconsin were both .;•.
Wooldrklge,
Byars'
replaceJohn
good to have It back. Right now, I knowshowtoleadhlsteam.Heglves
outside
linebackers, Eric Kumerow
ment,
also
has
been
slowed
by
think we're playing as well as you the complete package."
(shoulder)
and Byron Lee (Achilles ,
bruised
ribs.
but
has
been
able
to
anyone In the league."
Now that Cincinnati has gotten its
tendon).
· '·
"We're on a roll," s;tld quarter- act together, It must take It on the play every game.
BrucesaldtheBuckeyescouldnot
.,
"I think he (Wooldridge) should
back Boomer Eslason. "We're road.
to
take
Wisconsin,
despite
Its
'
alford
controlling our own destiny. I'm
The Bengals. tied with Pittsburgh get QE1tter each week 1" said Bruce.
extremely happy with where I am at5-5tortheAFCCentrallead,must "He has heen bruised up, but he's 4·5 overall and 1-5 record In the Big, ..
. ..
and where the team Is. This sure is a playfourof its final six games on the stayed In there. He's notlOOpercent , Ten, lightly.
"Wisconsin
Is
a
very fin e 4-5
but
he's
giving
us
I
be
effort."
lot better than belng2-5."
road. beginning with this Sunday at
Bruce also applauded I he effort of. football team," said Bruce. "We're .. ·
Eslason was clearly superior to the Los Angeles Raiders, foUowed
Browns' heavily publicized quarter· by a Nov. 24 rematch at Cleveland. Northwestern, despite Ohio State's go lngtohavetotakeWisconslnvery, ·.. :
back Bernie Kosar Sunday.
Following home dates Dec. 1 rei a lively easy 35- 17 win over the seriously because three of the last , . ;
four years they've ll!aten us."
·
"Bernie Is going to be a great against Houston and Dec. 8 against Wildca ts last Satunlay.
Ohio
State's
last
borne
loss
was
to
player," said Cincinnati receiver Dallas, the Bengals finish tbe
The BuckeyE'S, behind the passing
Crls Collinsworth, "but we wouldn't
regular season on the road- Dec. 15 of quarterback Jim Karsatos, the Badgers, 6-0, In 1982. Since tren,
trade Boomer for him."
at Washington and Dec. 22 at New streaked out to a35.Q lead early In the tiM&gt; BuckeyE'S have won aJ In arowln
Ohio Stadium.
_ _:Sa:::::ld:._:_O_:_ev_:e:.__lan:.:.:.__d_l.:_ln_eb_a_c_ke_r_To_m__E::.n:;::g::...la_:n_d_
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Bengals players no longer embarrassed

Letter to the .president ___~_Be_n_w:_at_te_nb_er_g
Dear Mr. President:
Pundits are saying you wUI have
a public .relations Jroblem with
Gorbachev at the summit. That's
sUly. The world knows that the
Soviets
are too
had guys.
I
,
You do have a real summit
problem, however. It concerns a
nuclear arms-control .agreement.
There Is danger of gridlock on the
American side of the negotiations.
Only one man can break the
logjam: you.
Whats going on now In Washington falls under a standard political
acronymlc rubric: B-MOP. That
stands for "Battle for the Mind of
the President." Nothing new In
that: It's what Washington politics
Is all about.
This partlcularB-MOP,howev..-,
Is curious. For till moment, It's
pitting some of your rest friends
against what one senses you'd like
to get: a truly tough-minded treaty
to cut nuclear weapons.
Your friends - the hawks make an almost persuasive case.
They say a derrocracy can't
successfully negotiate an armscontiol treaty with a totalitarian
state. In the past, there's been some
real merit to that view. The hawks
say that American dOves and State
department bureaucrats make
well-publicized demands on a president. This softens the U.S. negotlat·
lng position. The Soviets stand by,
watching the American position
erode.
America ends up lusting for any
old treaty, and we get one that
doesn't cut nuclear arms and Is
tilted toward Soviet Interests. The
hawks astutely point oot that, since
too arms-control process began, all
we've gotten Is more weapons,
more relative Soviet power and
. more lnstablllty. Their conclusion:
The U.S political system Is at fault;

snapped, the offending snowball
came ·salllng out of the stands and
landed just In front of holder Matt
Cavanaugh. He bobbled the snap
and the field goailty was botched.
"I ssaw the snowball," said
Cavanaugh. "It broke my ,oncentratlon. I'm not sure lf I got the ball
back up In time to kick It, but there
must not have been time because
Ray decided not to kick lt."
Referee Jim Tunney saw the
soowhaU being thrown, but said
after the game _trere was Uttle he
could do.
What he did dowasdemandmore
security during the second half.
"Cooperation was excellent by
security," said Tunney. "There
were virtually no snowballs thrown
during till second half.
"We had no recourse In terms of
foul or tocalllt on the hometeanior
the fans. There's nothing in the rule
book that allows us to do that.
"There Is no way you can construe
unsportsmanlike conduct. on a
snowbanlncldent llke that."
By the time the snowball Incident
came along, Elway had thrown
touchdowsses of 3 yards to Gene

Saberhagen wins A.L Cy Young Award

Purple-heartless_·____J_ac_k_A_n_de_rs_on_&amp;--=--Jo_se_p_h_Sp_e_ar·:
WASHINGTON -Sam Sortland
But when Rep. Byron Dorgan,
Isn't bitter; that's not his style. But D-N.D., tried to get a Purple Heart
the blind World war II veteran for Sortland recently he got this
would like one thing from his replay from Air Force Lt. Col. John
country: a Purple Heart for the J. Weaver:
wartime Injuries that robbed him of
"An analysis or these cases
his sight.
showed that many prisoners ci war
To anyone outside a Pentagon had been awarded Purple Hearts
swivel chair, his request would on what would have been Insuffiseem reasonable. Sortland 11, who cient evidence to support the award
lives In Ambrose, N.D., a small to a soldier wbo was engaged In
town near the Canadian border, actual combat on the field ·of banle.
emerged unscratched from the It would be extremely dHflcult to
nve-month siege ct Corregldor, the define brutality starvation or malIsland fortress In Manila Bay. But nutrition for the pu!l)Oses ct award
during nearly three years as a of the purple Heart."
prisoner-of-war, he was systematiThe Pentagon explained that
cally tortured, beaten and starved Sortland would have rated a Purple
by his Japanese captors.
Heart If he had been wounded while
On Feb. 4, 1945, Sortland and a ll!lng captured, wren trying to
handful of his surviving huddles escape or during bombardment of
were rescued by U.S. Rangers from the prison.
The distinction Is understandably
their Manila prison. He weighed 70
pounds and had lost all his teeth. lost on Sortiand. "Whether you got
And he was permanently blinded blind fighting or blind In prison
from the effects or starvation.
camp doesn't maner,' ' he said.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3.:~·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Snowball figures in Broncos l7-16win

Who's poorr___________Ja__,m_e_sJ_._K_ilpa:.__tr_ic_k

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Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, November 12, 1985 _;

Schottenhelmer, who te~ the
4-6 Browns situation as "totally
frustrating," said the "overall
picture" was the problem.

UPI Sports Writer
BEREA, Ohio (UPI) - Bernie
Kosar's Immediate family Includes
45 brothers.
One of them is his younger brother
"Bernie completed three long
Brian, The other 44 are his p~ to Newsome," he said. "As
Cleveland Browns teammates, wbo be sees this game more and more,
say they have "unwavering faith" In he'll do the things that need to be
their rookie quarterback.
done.
"It's premature to throw shovels
"We've lost four straight. but we
· feel Bernie can do the job, " says of dirt on us. Regarding Cincinnati,
veteran tight end Ozzle Newsome. we didn't take advantage of
"Bernie's part ct the Browns' team. offensive opportunities and defenWe feel we can win with him sively, we didn't make the big play
when we had to."
someday soon.
"The growing process Is painful,
Schottenhelmer said the Browns
but all the great ones have to go "have to get out of the losing
through It. Bernie-has tremendous · syndrome."
awareness and, sooner or later, he'll
"Some people say I'm dogmatic,
demonstrate the consistency we bull-beaded and maybe lack Intelliknow he.possesses."
gence but I don't look at It that way,"
Veteran quarterback Gaty Da· he said. "We're good mough to win
nielson, whose Injured right now, with the same people we have
s11oulder wUI keep him from playing."
practicing this week, said Monday
The coach pointed out two plays
· he spoke to Kosar after the Browns' that Irked him:
27-10 loss Sunday at Cincinnati.
- Byner's dropping a pass that
"We have to be patient with an was ruled a lateral, and Cincinnati
obviously super-talented and so- linebacker Reggie Williams recophisticated player . like Bernie vered till tumble.
Kosar, " said nine-year veteran • - a pass Interference penalty on
Danielson, whose Injury has meant cornerback Frank Minnifield that
five straight starts for Kosar.
set up the winning touchdown by
~·1 told Bernie you've got to walk
Bengals running back 'Charles
before you can run. He had gNat Alexander just before halftime.
success at Miami, but this Is
Schottenhelmer said Byner, wbo
different. Hlsreactlonsarenot what earlier caught a 27-yard scoring
the should be, but they will be.
pass from Kosar, should have
"His passes sometimes arm't on covered the dropped ball.
the mark, but they will Ill. AU the
"Don't force an official to make a
great quarterbacks had problems decision," said the ooach. "Earnest
failed In that situation.
their first year."
N~me said It Is "not lair to
"On Mlnnlfleld's proalty, well, I
compare Bernie to the other
dOubt that It was lntereferen\-'1' but I
quarterbacks In this league."
Danielson agreed. saying "(Ben· won't swear to lt."
Newsome, whose seven recepgals second-year quarterback Bootions
gave him 484 for his career and
mer) Eslason could barely advance
him to ~ Jackie Smith
enabled
the ball beyond the line of scrim·
mage last year. He's Improved lor first on the all· time NFL career 1
list lor tight ends, said the Browns
tremendously."
K0981'.finished With 16-ol-32 pass· ~~can shake loose."
lngfor229yanls,onetouchdownand
"The team meetings we had last
two Interceptions. ·
week
we just a beginning," he salcl,
"There were good plays and bad
plays," said Kosar, who had to cut referring to the players' &lt;jeslre to
his Interview short beCause head open up the cttense. "We have faith
coach Marty SchOttenhelmer's In Marty and In rurselves."
Schottenoolrner said there Is "no
news conference ran late.
·
chance"
Paul McDorulld would
"But ronslstency Is not unattainable. 1 know I have to be more speD Kosar, enlgmattcaUy adding, .
accurate with my passes and with · "If I can't tell you the truth, I won't
tell.rouanythlng." II&gt;
my df(enslve reads."

r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1·.•

-

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This II an emergency Our nation's family planni1J3
Novemberl4 unless
you call Capitol Hllllnunedialei}&lt; YOUR VOICE WILL TIJRN
THE TIDE. 1h reach your Repreoentative and both ynur Senaton
by phone before It's too late, call this central number and ask
for them by name: 202·224·31.21. They 'II listen to reason- if the
reasona com11 dli'I!Ctly from you. Ca.ll today. Tim~ is running out.
)lrORI'IJII will end Ill thestrokeofmidnlghton

0 lw heeded your urgent notice to caJ I my Representative
and both my Senators. urging them to fully fund our
lllition~ family planning prosram (litle X) and save it from
crippling a\nendments before the /lbwmber 14 dead li ne
0 Heres my tax-deductible contribution to support all
of Planned Parenthood's p11J81l!l11S and activities:
0 $25 0 $50 0 $75 0 $150 0 !.100

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;:t,,,., o

...
Orrtcc• Se rv ing:
Athens, Chesapea ke,
Chillicothe, Gallipolis,
Jackson, Logan,

McArthur &amp; Pomeroy

\ It

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�Tuesday, November 12, 1985

Ohio

•

The Daily Sentinel

Black Hawks stop Rangers in overtime
1

NO.. results ·

-

NATioNAL .XU\' lEAGUE

NATI)N.U. FOO'IULL 1.&amp;\GUE
8)'Udttll'rfM.._._.

s.

Arnert .. eo.......

r&lt;Y .k&lt;•

.'\
3
4
7
%B

N. EnJE.
Miami

Ind.

.......s

Bmo
Cncoo!

s

"""'

0
0
0
0

0

Houstn

Tm!mo at St . Uuls. 8::fl p.m.

..,....,.• a.m.

Boston at Buffalo, nlj:tlf
Mln111"50la at HartfOrd. nl~l
MOI\nt·al at NY Rangers, nl.gh!
~ at Chleqo. ~ttr

5 0 !100~ 288
5 0 !ffi 219 181

PltlsWI'(I:h at VIII\('()Uvt&gt;r, n~t

OMro!t a TLoG Aqplft, nighT
WIMipl'llill Calgary. nlfhl

7 3 0 .'UI2J6 1!17
6 4 0 .Sil2.10 227
6 ~ 0 .tlXJ 248 ~

LARdrs
Sratllf&gt;

5

S. ""'

~

0

UPI results

.~:liO~'i

NEW YORK IUP il - Ttw Unl1ed Prftl
lnlrrnallonal Board ol Coachel Top XI
oo ~ loofball ratlnp. wtth ftrst-piare
\'Oies and l"f'l''O'tk I~ IJIU'Witbesn. kltll

l 7 0 ~1XIl9'Jo'UO

KC

Nal-..1 CoftfrertaDt

......7 3 0 .1!11. 227 11{]

NY Gnt s

points ttltiNI onl5 polnllt)r tim pl.lre, lt
fol- wcoOO. t'tc.1. and last M'H.'s ral'lldnC,
1. Pt'lln Sta1PI:W )l9-0\
6H 1
2. Nebraska lt~ tS.ll
*I 2
3. Ohio Slate Il l !S.ll
4'.11 J
~ . A1r Fort'f t 3Hl~l
489 t
~. Ia~o·a (IHI
()5 5
6. Oklahoma 16-1 ~
44li t)
7. MIII'I'IIIFI&amp; l tS.l t
3!1 7
&amp; Mlchlpn 17·1·11
~ 9
9. ArUI'ISIS 18-11
1!110
10. Ok.. homa Stt(7·ll
Zi211

7 J 0 .700Ul153

Dallas
Wash,

5 5 0 .~165181
5 $ 0 ,5{1] 1~ lfi~
4 6 0 .«XX 186 232

PI'IUa.
St . Loo.
•

Qonl nl

10 0 0 l.(JJI

""·

w 127

Dirt
MIM.

5 5 0

Gr. a. ~·

4 6 0 .Ol191 2D

,5{1]

til !lO

550~ l» ll"1

1 9 0 .IOO'DI 2i2

TmpB;.-

w..

LARm•

8 2 0 .!OJ 210 151

S. f"an
N. Orlrw

3 7 0 ..111176 262

11. UCLA t1·Hl
12. GroriLIIH -H
13. AuWm 17·21
tt. f1or!da Stitt' (7-21

1:1115
lJi 14

. 1 ~ . DrllfWtl YOngiii-Zl
16. Baylor !1-21

Si 18
!6 8

11. Tenrnft c~t-~1

to 11
.:E lJ
1919
l3 Z

5 5 0 .Dl 244 l !K

1 9 0 .100 1M JJ1
Su...,.•• ReM*&amp;

AU.!

Ptl!Jadrlphlll Zl. Atlanta 17 1Gfl

Cln&lt;'inna!l 27. Ck-.•l'lan:llO

OJJcaeo u. Df'4rotr J
Cn¥n Bay '11. Mlnne501:a 17

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Transactions

Denwr 17. San Francbro Hi
S.llla.J, NO'I . n (AJI '1nl!ll EST)

and ?lt d~ .Jotol Mc'Kftonfr(mBuffaloiMI
and lnftlllder Mike 5qx&gt;r tram Glen FaU1

LA Rams at AU.arna, 1 p.m.
at lndl.aftlpolls. I p.m.
NeY.· OrPan!i vs. G1'1't't1 &amp; y at MiJwaukrf'.

Ml~ml

i F:L l.
Otic~

J. Yl'IIJ ront ract.
Clntln111111- Ttad('d pUc~ Bob-Eucha·

n01n to San Frand.K'o for pltci'IN'Cal!n Wild.
Montrt"ai - Naml'd Jor Sparks ~s
man~ of tht&gt; Indianapolis Indian! d Ill'
Azn('rk'an Association.

1\"xas - Namtd Blll Strarm mana,er of
Tulsa 1AA1 .

Kansas City 11 SaD Franrl!JCC. t p.m.
!\an Dlerilo 11 OlmoPr. 4 p.m.
......,.,NM. )III
NY Giants at Washlf1Jl1at. 9 p.m

ToronTO A!s~Knl'd uuttkoldt•n Rick
Leach and Kash Bf'auchamp 10 ~I'8C\II'
1!Lt; ! ~ pil('lrrs Mar k ElrhMrn,
Glb!oo Alba and .kill' Ca ldn'on.

NBA results
Portland

NATI)Nr\L IIASKE1'14LL A..."80C.
. . . ,•• Raul

''

~n

'•

Antookt m . Nf"W Jt'l'fl"Y t l)l

Waln'CI

forward

Brn

NorthW('Strr n -

""""

ExfC"ndrd 1hnll!¥h 1!9)

ttw' cctl!rac1 d AthiNlr Dln&gt;ctor DouJia!

""""·

Wyomlnp: - Annollttr&lt;'d footbaU toae'h AI

Klnrokl wUI!xo rt'1)1;1('P(! aftPr ttl(&gt;

~~n .

F..bol
Srat!k&gt; - Plac«&lt; f\ll~k D11n Doomlnk
on the' lnfuwd l'f'5f' n lf' list : rt'SIJJVd flllllack
Andrt&gt; Ha~·.

"..,...,." Ganw.

Indiana a1 Boston, nll!hl
Olk'¥0 at Phlladt'tpllla, n.l,;ht
Phomlr. at Allanla , ~hi
INtroit at Mllw1u!ft, nlfl:hl
Dllll.!i a! U!ah. nllf'lt
SPatnr• 11 LA O lpp«&gt;n. niJthl

',.
''

-

.........

folll'man.

.........,G.,..IAD,.,_DTI
Wasl*llf!on at Vf1roit . 7:.1) p.m..
Pbomlx a1Nl'· YIV'k. a p.m.
MIIWiulft at Chlr~ 8: .Jl p1m.
OPnve-r 1 t Houston. a: ll p.m
Utatt at L.A.. WPn, lO: .J) p.m.
LA. Qlppm II Goldm SlaU'. IO: ll p.m.
s.t'rametllo at Portland. )():]} p.m
Ollla.\ 11 Sloank&gt;, tO:lJ p.m.

'
''

pUctlt'r Scol!

~ndl't'Ul to a

I p.m.
Ptttst:ll$ at Hwston.. I p.m.
Phlladripbia 111St lou..l!; , I p.m.
1'1mp1 Bay at NY Jr15. l p.m.
Mlllflf'SOla at [l{&gt;trolt. 4 p.m.
New EJTglllnd 111 Sl:o111k'. 4 p.m.
C'lneiM81l 11 LA Raidl'rS. 4 p.m.

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regarding future major league
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Mayor Dana Rinehart Is conlldent baseball franchises. Groups from 11
local Investors could be found to other clUes also lobbied for
provide the $100 mllllon needed to franchises .
"Money to buy a franchise Is mta
. start a major league baseball team
If Columbus Is given the opportunity .big problem," Rinehart said Sunday . "1 didn't have to tell them
to buy a franchise.
"You could name lin people who (baseball dflcla!s) that we had the
could handle it," Rinehart said. "All money. They already knew It They
you have to do Is look around. You don't lnvlteyru there lfyouarefrom
Hee Haw, Fla."
•could start with Dan Galbreath."
Rinehart also' said the baseball
Galbreath, whosefamtlylsseiUng
the financially troubled Pittsburgh owners know Columbus has com·
Pirates, has said be Is wUUng to panies with vast assets.
consider being part owner of a big
Galbreath said It Is more Ukely
that a group of people and
league Columbus club.
Galbreath. and Rinehart led a businesses. rather than me family,
Columbus group that met with would buy a new franchise. GuideBaseball Commissioner Peter Ones mailed to each city suggested
Ueberroth and severr.l team owners tba t $100mUlion In q&gt;erattng capital
ln New York City last Thursday would probably be needed to start a
team.
Richard Wagner, president and
general manager of the Houston
Astros, said any city wanting
baseball would be better off going
after an existing franchise.
"Something will have to be done
with
·the struggllng clubs - San
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Francisco,
Pittsburgh and CleveCincinnati Reds and San Francisco
land
before
there Is expansion,"
Giants swapped 24· year-old lef·
he
said.
thanded pitchers Monday - the
Wagner, former president o! the
Reds sending Bob Buchanan to the
Clnclrinatl
Reds, said Columbus Is
Giants for Colin Ward.
"an
rutstanding
city for baseball. "
Buchanan had a1.() record and an
8.~ earned run average In 14
appearances for the Reds this psdy
season. With the Reds' Denver
minor league team, hewas4-3wltha
2.18 ERA In 29 appearances.
Ward was 3-0Wtth a 5.88ERAln22
appearances for the Giants' Phoenix farm team.ln six appearances
for the Giants late In the season he
had a 4.38 ERA with no record.
The Reds assigned Ward t~ their
Denver farm club, while the Giants
placed Buchanan on their 40-man
wlnler major league roster.
The Reds also announced they
bad assigned the · contracts of
Infielder Tom Rurmells and pitcher
Carl Willis to Denver.

Reds trade

Buchanan to

Chicago t .4J..l - P\lrch1dit'd OOnl raCII of
tnnrlcrrs Russ Morman and O.vf'Corlu-arw

BurraJo a! Ck'Y~and. 1 p.m.
Chicafce 111Dallas. 1 p.m.

'

Th 16

19. Tt'ltas AIM 16-21
II . Tt"KKS 16-21
Othe-!'1 ~vlng VOlts: Alabama , ArtzDna
Statt&gt;. Bc:MIIlna Grerm. ColoraOO. fn&gt;m:l
Staff'. Kansas. M1Me5ota and ~ rac\1~.

N€'W EnRIBnd 34, Indianapolis 15
NY Ctantsll, LA Rams 19
PttiiWI'Ih .)6, Kansas CIT)' 18
Tampa Bay li, Sl . Lou.is 0
Seanw 11. Nfw Ork&gt;a~s 3
San Dil'SO «J. LA Rakifn Jil tOT I
MiMll 21. 1\.'Y Jt&gt;ts 17
DIILas 13. WnhlnKton 7

'

n112

18. lbii:Slana Sl!IHl l

Buffalo 'IJ. Houston 0

,.

Money no object for
Columbus franchise

Monll'f'a.l at N .Y. lslendrrs. 8.: &lt;:&amp; p.m.

WMI

o••, . ..

v

Ffimontoon at Wa.shinifOO, 7:1'i p.m.

.'UI Zl5 ~
.100 3)7 171
.9JJ2AI 211
3Xl l87 11l
.JXI 141216

4 6 0 .400 1fll 159
4 6 0 .«XX 162 ~

Clvl"'

Mo....,.,._.

O.il'iliO NY. Ranrs t OT
VanroUVf'f' 5, Oeti"'II 0
~·· o.n.. i.\11 'l'lmM ~TJ

WL T Pd. PF Pr\

7
7
6
3

New York Rangers remain ().for·
overtime this year.
UPI Sporta Writer
Bob Murray scored a rare
Thanks to a controversial penalty
power-play
goal 53 seconds Into 0'1'
late In the game Monday night, the

By KEVIN KENNEY

NHL results ·

·-

"""' blandetn; - Srnt Fft lol.'lnfe'l Dak'
Hctll'\', Glmn ,Johanf'l'Sm :and Gwi{ GI Ix'ft

to Spi-!nltflrld 1AH L1 .

Pi tt!iW~Jth Srnt dfofm!im'lan Jar
McDonnl'll!o&amp;llirnt'n' 1AHL1.

San Francisco

I

VanM~ter

- 527;

~I

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E~~~~;F1~y~e~rs~g~oa~lt;en~de~rl

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Dally ... .. ... .. ... ... .. .. .... ........... 2.5 Cents

•

sUbscribers not destnng to pay thecar-

•

r ler may rem\1 In advance direct to

The Dally senunel on a J. &amp;or 12 month
ballS. Credit will be given carrier each
month.
No subscrlptlon.!t by mall permUted In
towns where home carrier servlcl' Is

available.
Mall Subocrlpt\ooo
11111d• Oklo
13 Weeks ........ ..... .. ..... ..... ......... $14.56

11r

26 Weeks .... ... ........ .. ...... .. ....... $29.12

52 weeks ..... .................. ........... $58.24

Oulllde Oldo
13 Weeks ..... .. .......... ................ Sl5.60
26 Weeks .................. ................ S3l.II
52 weeks ....... ........ ................... Sii9.80

.••
'

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Pelle Lindbergh, who stoppedfiylng
pucksforallvlnganddrovefastcars

for
fun, decided
lay unconscious
as the
his
famlly
when to today
turn &lt;1f
respirator keeping him alive.
Undbergh, 26, was hooked up to
the life-saving machine after his
custom-built Porsche sped lnto the
concrete steps of a school In
suburban Philadelphia early Sun·
day. He was declared brain dead
and given no hope of survival.
"The prognosis continues to be not
compallble with life," Flyers team
physician Edward Viner said Mon·
day. "It really Is a matter of how
long the support system Is con·
tlnued. Brain death means If the
respirator were turned off, he would
die."
Doctors said the aU-star net·
mlnder was legally drunk when the
accident occurred. His blood·
alcohol level was 0.24 percent, more
than twice the legal llrnJt In New
Jersey.
He was "a bubbly little guy
bOuncing around on the Ice and
foollng around In the locker room,"
said F1yers general manager Bobby
Clarke, who played with Lindbergh
In Philadelphia before being elevated to the front &lt;1flce.
His friends said Lindbergh en·
joyed hlgl) performance cars and
had his 1985 Porsche Turlxl sent
back to West Germany !K&gt; It could be
rebuilt' to run fasler. He also
purchased a speed boat last year.
Ltndergh's family was deciding
when to switch off 1the respirator.
They wah led to donate Lindbergh's

Second Hlgh Game: Helen Phel!l'l - 198:

•

•

'

f!J~6-

F,,uu~ ~-e
(114) ........
MIDDI.II'OIIT, 01!10 ·

Sentinel SWf Wrler
The mall brought such a nice note
from Shorty
· Wright who has
bad a long hard
bout with leuke-

mia," and . continues to undergo

SUN FUN

POMEROY BOWUNG LANDS
Ear~ Wednolday Mixed Ocl. ill, 19111
Tony' s Carry Out .. ....... .. .. .. ,... .... .... .. .... .42

Eagle's Club ............ ... .. ... ...... .. .... .........·40

PENNZOIL

Jim' Gull ....... ......... .. ....... .. .. .. .. . .........JJ
7-33 CaiTY Out .......... ......... .... ...... ..... .... 33
MWkll(l)OM Luoch Room .... .. .. .. ..... ......... ll

Speelal

Smith-Nelson Motors .. ... ...... ...... .. .. .. .. ~
Team Series: Tony's Carry 0~1 - l)S);
Team Game: Tony's Carry Out - n1; HJgh
Ser..,: Larryi).Jgan - 51~ John 1'yn!e 539: Second High Serle~ : Carolyn Bachner - .

I

8 PACI - 16 OZ.

$181

471: High Game: Larry
Dugan and Jim Hawley- 210: Bob Hensley

5ll; Helen

PEPSI

Phelps -

•Servire With A Smile"

- ZJ1; 3econd High Game: Pat Carson -189:

Located In

Carolyn Bachn er - !ll6:

OH.
•

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PUT THE

BO
wo
RYOU.

oL

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter &lt;1 Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
meet at Diamond Savings and Loan
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse PTO
meet Tuesday 7 p.m .. at the school.
A book fair wUI be held.
RUTLAND - ~utland Village
Council meet Tuesday, 7 p.m .. civic
cenler.
HARRISONVll.LE - Harrison·
vllle Senior Citizens wlll have free
blood pressure day, Tuesday, 10
a.m. to noon. Ferndora Story wlll
supervise. Everyone welcome.

GALLIPOLIS416Seconcl Avenue . . _

.446·2765

300 W. Second Street.

Evenl•pud wuhnd• b)' appollltalent.
All lna n s~ubji:r l to~ rt:d1t appmv~l
lnd!VLdual •lldJomt trtdL t ~~J Liabl r

.992·2111

Talk to the manager, and you're talkjng to the boss.

POMEROY- Pomeroy Chapter
80 Royal Arch Masons and Bos·
worth Councll Royal and Select
:· Masons will meet Wednesday
:: evening, 7: 30 p.m., In regula r
~·· session.

AliD

PJ. PLEASANT FOODLAND
OPEN 24 HIS. WEEIIDA YS

Thursday, Nov. 14
DINNERS STARnNG

WEDNE.'iDAY
, ' MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Amateur Cardeners meet Wednesday, 8 p.m. Presbyterian Church In

1ENDERIEST USDA BONELESS

AT 4:30
PRIZES AND GAMES
DUliNG EVENING

RIB EYE
STEAK ·

· INSTANT

MAXWELL '.HOUSE

COFFEE

Slinderella
class meets

$389

1201.$399

CoMie Thompson and Carol
. McClure were the t~ losers at the
: Tuesday night meeting o!the Mason
· Class of Sllnderella. Malinda Casto
: l!'as the rurmerup and two new
members welcomed.
At the Five Points class, Gladys
·Thomas lost the most weight and
·Judy Wolfe was runner-up.

JAR

SPRITE

FODDLAND

DIET OR REGULAR

PEAS,
PORK &amp; BEANS

3

15-16
CANS

oz.$1·

Ill.

99c·

·

' the grand prize Winner In the
Halloween coloring contest held by
·,Fruth Pharmacy. She received a
· "Pound ~ppy" for her prize.
' Other winners were Chad
Folmer, Pomeroy, In the 3 to 5 age
· group; Heather Harris, Syracuse, 6
to 9 groop; Becky Wise, Mlddlejxlrt, 10 to 12 age groop. Alxlut 500
chlJdren partlc!Jll!led In the contest. ,

SEE STORES FOR DETAILS

r
.

"

SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Dlsabllltles meets
Thursday. 7 p.m:, Carleton School,
Syracuse. Open to the public.
DORCAS - Meigs chapter of
Make Today County meetlng at 7
p.m. Thu~ay at the Bethany
Church In Dorcas; all persons with

Bridal shower
A brklal shower honoring Jen·
nlfer Dye, bride-elect of Ken.net h
Roble of Mason wUI be held Frida~
at 7:30 p.m. atthehomeof Mrs.Jean
Gilmore, 50 Riverview Drive,
Middleport. Family and friends are
Invited to attl"!ld.

l1ff'l\

e

Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Hartung and
son Jed, Cleveland, were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Nice.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton ADen and
Cletus Allen visited their father
M.H. Allen In Prestonsburg, Ky.,
· and their uncle Roher! Allen In
Ashland, Ky., Thursday. Cletus
Allert returned to his. home In
Columus Friday.

Mrs. Nellie Richardson, Jackson·
ville, Fla.. Mrs. Annie Will, Mrs.
Faye Smith and daughtr Sherr!, all
of Jesup, ·Ga., spe11t a lew days with
Mr. 81\d Mrs.Clayton Allen. Jolnlng
them Friday evening lor dinner
were Mr. and Mrs. Karl Kloes,'
Syracuse. Afternoon callers were
Lydia Berry, Audry Rowan and
Patty l3rownrlgg, aU of Belpre.
Saturday morning Dr. and Mrs.
Billy R. Allen, Katie and Bobby,
Westerville, joined them and spent
the weekend with the Aliens.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond VanMe· •
ter and Mr. and Mrs. Earl
VanMeter and son of Youngstown,
and Richard VanMeter and Judy
NevO!e. Valparaiso, Ind.. were
recent visitors of Mrs. Opal EtchIn·
ger and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Nice.
Mrs. Linda Well and Mrs. Karla
Chevalier were business visitors In
Columbus, Saturday.

Bank women meet

".....,.......

The National Association of Bank
Women, Southeastern Ohio Bank
Group, met Nov. 5t h at the Ohio
University Inn, Athens. Speaker
·was Mrs. Suzanne Croce ofCHEAO
Cancer Resource CenCer, who
showed a fUm on cancer detection
techniques.
New officers for l!J85.86 are Arm a
Porter, First National Bank of
Waverly, preldenl ; Marllyn Ross,
Hocking Valley Bank, Athens, vice
president; cKay Nourse, Ports·
mouth Banking Co., secretary; and
Ruth Cooper, First National Bank,
Waverly, treasurer.
·
Program plans fQr the upcoming
year weredlscussedandwilllnclude
a study module and trip to the
Federal Reserve Bank In Clncln·
nail. Next meellngwillbe held on the
third Tuesday of February at the
Ohio Un
Inn.

.-.. .......-

·-••• • •I I

......

. ,,..,,

_

..,.,........
'"

-

;

"'-·
... ....

..._,
.....

ALOT OF HOME.AT ANV PRICE/
A full foundetlon lkyllght. end utrelntulttlon pec:kegt arejutt 1

few of the mMy footuret built Into thit homo. Cttll ut for dettilt,
tnd 11
your home It individually handlcreftecl on your lot
local

MODEL ltOIIE &amp; OfFICE
l'o llll£ IOITH Of 1-n

NEWPORT PIKE, IAIIEnA, OH.
1614) 374·4344

OPEN 11(£KDA1S 1·9: SAT. lU
SUN. By Appolnt1111nt

ASPEN COLORADO?
/

/

Revival

POMEROY - Pomeroy Church
of the Nazarene will be In revival
Tuesday through Sunday with Rev.
Don Dunn as evangelist. Dunn. a
former member of the Akron
District, Is now a member of the
Central Ohio District. Services will
begin at 7 p.m. nightly.
Turkey supper
TUPPERS PLAINS - A turkey
supper, sponsored by the Ladles
AuxUiary of the Orange Township
Volunteer F1re Department, will be
held Saturday at the Tuppers Plains
Fire Station. Serving will begin at
4:30p.m. and thepriceofmealswUI
• he $4. The menu wlll consist of
turkey and dressing, homemade
noodles, mashed potatoes and
gravy. green beans, salad bar, rolls
and butter, pie, cake, coffee and tea.

Open your own jton-~portswtar,
ladies boutiqut, chlldrtn's petilts
Of lorgt aizt stort.llundrtds of 110•
ti0111l brands. Acctaorits ll10nd·
bags. btlts, jowolry, ok.). o.. timt
fH of $13,300 inch..tes initial in·
vtnrory, store fhrturts, air lart for
buying rrip, storo sllpplits olll
much mort. Hne your storo opon
wllhin IS dayJI

NO!

Winter 1984-1985 in Meigs County, Ohio
DON'T LET THIS WINTER CATCH YOU STUCK
WITHOUT TRACTION TIRES

---------------------------------------------OUR ENTIRE INVENTORY OF WINTER TIRES
ARE PRICED BELOW LAST YEAR'S PRICES
CHECK YOUR SIZES NOW

RADIAL

BIAS \
STUDDING
AVAILABLE

CALL TODA Yll

MI. UTE 704·274· 5965

NEW TIRES
MOUNTED &amp; BAIANCm

RETREADS SOLD

PLUS RECAPPABLE
TRADE OR

FREE

$3.25

S~f.OO

CASING CHARGE

LAYAWAYS WELCOME

PH.

* ~34,500

THE PRINCETON I

' '· Becky Ockerman, Dexter. was

DOUBLE COUPONS ALL WEEK

lill.llower

birthday.

.Contest winners
:are announced

at A11ponslble roh yporraphlctl Enors- Prlcts Effective thru Sat., N".

Surlee P/11~ : .AIHtltlo• to Dettlll

Mr. and Mrs. Jqhn Brownrigg,
Lydia Berry and Audry Rowan, aU
of Belpre, visited their uncle Billy
Cleland and preSEIIted him with a
dec orated cake lor his 92nd

Service cancelled
POMEORY -The regular Wed·
nesday evening service of the First
Southern Baptist Church, Pomeroy,
has been cancelled. All members
are urged to a ttend a special service
at 7 p.m. Thursday. A prospective
pastor will present a trial service at
that meeting. Refreshments and a
special buslness meetlngwlllfollow.

ROCK SPRINGS- Rock Springs
Grange meets Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the hall.

Mesler Cord and VIII Welcome

Chester happenings

HOBSON - Ron and Wilma
Priest, of New Guinea. will he
fea tured speakers Wednesday at
Hobson Church of Christ In Chris·
tlan Union. Services will begin at
7:30p.m.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority wUI meet Thursday, 7:30
p.m., atDlamondSavlngsandLoan.

*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATED: MAIN ST., RUTLAND. OHIO
OPEN : 8-6 MON.·SAT.: B·B FRI.
PH. 742-3088

M0'111ER-IN·LAW AWARD - Susie Flsher of Momlng star was
awarded the "Mother-In-law of the Year Award" In a pnnO.tion of
WMPO Radio and Francis Ji1orlst. She was presmled a certUicate and a
bouquet of red roses. Gerald E . Michael, Syracuse, her son·ln·law,
mmlnated her for the award.
·
'

life threatening Illness, their rela·
tlves and friends Invl1ed.

COCA-COLA
2 LITER

LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
LIGHT TRUCK TIRES

Middleport. Kathryn MUter will
have the program and Veda Davis
and Marge Fetty will be hostesses.

RACINE - Regular meeting of
LAUREL CLIFF - Laurel Cliff
RaclneLodge461F&amp;AMwtllbeheld
Tuesday. Officers wUI be elected · Health Club will meet at Jean
and work will be In the E .A. Degree. Wright' s 7 p.m. Thursday.

ftBeneficial·

SACRED HEART
CHURCH BAZAAR

RUTLAND
TIRE
SALES
, ·"8EniM8 VOU THERE SAFEL'I"

Community calendar I area happenings

The boss is in at the following locations:

POMEROY -

'

A reception honoring John Morris verslty In June, and Kevin Is In his
and Kevin Gibbs was held recently fifth year o! study at Ohto
at 'the Rutland United Methodist University.
Church SOCial room.
Food and refreshments wer!e
The women of the church hosted served from a table carrying out )l
the reception for the youths who fall motif. The Rev . Andy Rubenk·
have been active ln thechurchslnce lng, pastor, gave the blessing.
childhood. John has ·now left for · Monetary gifts and expressions of
rnllltary duty following his ROTC best wishes were given to Morris
Commission received at Onto Unl- and Gibbs.
·

William Hennosy, state !Ire
marsball, advises that the second ·
mostcommontypeo!householdfire
In Ohio occurs In the kitchen .... that's
nearly 2,400a year. They rmst often
occur during preparation of the
evening meal when burners are set
high and the stove Is left unattended.
So...... the marshall has come up
with a slogan which Is easy to
remember.. "put a lid on grease

treatment.
Shorty spent
·several weeks at University Hospl· fires."
He says besides being easy to
tal and now travels back and forth
for her treatments. Whlle at the remember, It Is the simplest and
hospital she recelved.over 500 cards safest action to take. A lid the same
size or slightly larger than the pan
"each one a blessing."
· Shorty has such a great outlook. wUI smother the Dames. As soon as
As she says In her note, "The the lid Is In place. turn off the burner
trealments have me weak, skinny and let the pan root be lore removing
and bald (but I save a small fortune It from the burner.
·Hennosy, who, Incidentally. Is a
onshampooand~ndltloner! ha ,l)al
I'm able to crochet and wrtte again, former Meigs Coont!an, says that
through I walk like a duck. Praise the worst thing a person can do Is to
try to move the bumtngpanfrom the
the Lord! !CAN WALK!"
Shorty was at the Rutland Civic stove to theslnk ..Thepan will be hot,
Center's halloween party although the handle wouldn't provide enough
protection and you wlll probably
she did go In a wheel chali'.
drop
It and splatter naming grease
Here's for continued Improve·
on yourself. Anyway, water just
rnent, Shorty.
tends to splatter the burning grease,
Oops ....Ail~ Adams Is not the and either way, :yuu may be Injured.
When food In the oven catches ftre,
daughter o! .Norma Calkins Peo·
pies, who donated the land for the the best action Is to close the oven
Bufflngion Island State Memorial and let the lire go out, Hennosysays.
Park at PorUand. She Is the
BesuretosetasldeDec. 4. That's
daughter·ln·law of Armle Adams,
when
the annual holiday program,
who was Mrs. Peoples' sister. Sorry
"Home lor the Holidays". of the
'bout thai.
Meigs County Extension Office will
Over 50 dod~~rtzes will be be held .
Lots of things are planned
awarded at Salurday night's !all
including
displays and demonstra·
!estlval ·at the Salisbury Elementlons on Christmas crafts, foods and
tary School.
The action starts at 5 when the decorations. Time management
kitchen opens to serve sandwiches. (we all need alltlledlrectionon that I
pizza, soups, and desserts. The . holiday table ooverlngs, Christmas
games begin at 6:30 and from then greenery, and more will be topics of
on there wUI be plenty or actkm. The the day. Things start at ro. there's a
"blggles" In prizes awarded during potluck luncheon at ooon, some
the evenlng wUI be two $00 bills, and caroling, and special speakers with
a cassette recorder. Come on, Ups on how to get your holiday ac1
everyone: It's open to the public, a together. Now that's a challenge!
fUnd raiser of the Salisbury PTO.

. You've worked hard for it all. Now, isn't it tiJ)le you put the boss
at Beneficial' to work for you. Right now, there's a Beneficial
manager ready to talk about what you want. Just you, the boss
- and a Beneficial Credit Line up to $200,000. So talk to the
boss at Beneficial- who's always ready to work hard for you.

Most people feel tht responsibility to asurethtir family or 1111·
viwrs a reesonlllly smooth ldjust111111t to l~e without you. Ful·
filtlnc this responsibility helps a:reetly i1 your PNCI i mind.
Life insurance prottction. written up by 1 llnowltdCtablt
11ent to suit our situation, is an important step.
A will is an essential' document that will assure your estate
will be dirtettd as you dnire. Statelaw1,.ry so acompttent
tnytr In the stalt of your residtnct Is your bestadvisor. lm·
portant Items to includt in your willllliJI!t Include tltt n1111in1
of an t1ecutor, your bequests·of il&amp;nlltcant (I!'Opertin, trust
funds, and any mtmoritl or rtmemllrenct pits.
Pre·plannlnc your funeral •ranae11tnts is tlso a cr11t rtlief
to your survivors. You definitely l!lllrelitvt their ~urdens in
their hours of sorrow and we ctn htlp you with thiS without
cost or obliption.
Keep in mind lhlt llft·deposll boxes art usually inaccessi·
ble for some timt afttr a death. A1111111 savinp account or 1
book of Traveltr's Clltcks which 1rt imlfttCIIately milable
will help until tht tltllt is Stttltd.

James N. llawtr ·

ByCHARLENEHO~CH

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

Phelps - 181.

Helen

Reception held for OU students;

Praise the Lord,
even in adversity

And get aCredit Line Account up tQ $200,000.

WHAT PROTECTION SHOULD I HAVE FOR MY FAMILY?

••

, ....

organs, but were told by doctors that
the transplants would have to be·
done within 48 hours.
His mother, Anna Lisa, was with
her son at the hospital all day
Monday. His father, who suffers
serious heart problems, !Iewin from
their native Sweden Monday
evening.
Lindbergh's fiancee, Kerstln
Pletzch, of Stockholm, was at the
fallen goaltender's bedside.
Clarke, who said Lindbergh was
not a drinker and "hardly ever
drank," said he hoped Lindbergh's
tragedy would provide a lesson for
all.
"Hopefully, · something this
tragedy will change some of us,"
said Clarke, who led the Flyers to a
pair of Stanley Cups In the early
1970s.
Llndbergh, who posled a 4(). 17·7
record In helping lead the Flyers to
the Stanley Cupflnals lastyear,last
played for the Flyers Thursday.

Hensley - e8; Hlgh

Game; John Tyree- 231: Ra y Roach- Ill :

Pll(le- 5·

Community corner

I

:· Lindbergh's condition unchanged
• • _ By KATHLEEN CLUI'E
STRATFORD, N.J. (UPIJ

By The Bend

to cap a three-goal spurt and enable penalties In the last 10 minutes and
the Chicago Black Hawks to snap a ·he calls n\e for holding when I b~rdly
four-game losing streak with a 54 touched the guy," Greschner said.
"(But) you have to Uve with it.
victory over the Rangers at Mad!·
There's
nothlng we can do about it.
son Square Garden.
We seem to fall back In overtime and
do
mt play aggressively enough."
Murray's goal was rare because
Darryl
Sutter, the Black Hawks'
penalties are seldom called In
captain,
agreed.
.
overtime situations, where the team
"He
(Foumler)
doesn't
oall
that scores first wins. This penalty
- a two-minute holding on Ron anything the whole third period,
Greschner - was actually called In then he calls that It was a very
the waning seconds of the third questionable call. (But) we finally
period, but the effect was the same: gtlt some breaks."
Murray skated In !roin the right
the Rangers found themselves a
point
and took a pass from Doug
man down In sudden death.
Wilson before llfl:atlng ·vanbles·
Referee Ron Fournier's call brouck for 'his second goal of the
became a source of controversy season.
"The last :!1 minutes wewereju~t
after Murray capltallzed by beating
terrible,"
he said. "We lost aU the
Ranger goaltender John Vanblesconfrontations
rut there. There Ism
brouck from 25 feet out, sending the
worse
feeling
than
losing a game lp
Rangers to their fourth loss In four
overtlnie."
overtime games this season.
With New York leadlrig4·2, Behn
Wllson
started the ChicagO come"The referee could have called 10
back at 5:06 of the third period.
Sutter then tied 114-4 with a I().footer
from the slot at 8:44.
Local bowling
Canucks 5, Red Wlnp 0
POMEROY BOWLING LANDS
At
Vancouver;
Brltlsh Columbia,
Earl&gt; Wedneaday Mixed 0c1. Ill. 19111
Jim's Gulf .. .... .
.. .................... ...... 37
Rick Lanz scored two goals and two
Eagles Club ........ .. ......... .. ..... ... .. .. ......... 34
assists and Steve Tambellinl and
Tony's Cany Out .. .. .. ., . ......... ....
... .11
Moe Lemay addedpower·play goals
7·3.1 Ca rry Out .. .
.. ....... .... .. ...... 31
Middleport LW1Ch Room .. .......... ............ 31
to lead the Canucks. Richard
Smtth·Nelson Motors .. . . ............ .. .. .. 23
Brodeur stopped :!1 shots for his
Team SeMes: 'Middleport Lunch Room mT; Team Game: Middleport Lunch Room
second shutout of the season, lxlth
- 699: High Seri&lt;s: John ry,. - 570: Helen against Detroit.
Phelps - 544; Second High Series: Charlie

Tuesday, November 1~. _1985

~

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

�I'

Tuesday, November 12, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-&amp;-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 12, 1985

I
I

Business Services

·Soviets say U.S. intends to trivializesummit
MOOCOW (0PI) - The Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev in Geneva,
Union said the United States Switzerland, on Nov. 19-20.
The Soviets want the United
"Intends to burden" the superpower
States
to end worl&lt; on the Strategic
summit agenda with trivial topics to
Defense
Initiative. a space-based
avoid discussing nuclear arms
missile
defense
program popularly
control and space-based weapons.
The Soviet news agency Tass tmo~Nn as "Star Wars," as a prelude
Mooday charged Washington's ref- to any agreement to cut nuclear
usal to discuss space weapons weapons.
· " It Is clear that the U.S.research spo~ any chance lor a
propagandized
·strategic Defense
constructive meeting between PresIdent. Reagan and Soviet leader • Intttatlve, lilt Is realized. would bar

Include topics such as human rights
and regional q~nlllcts In Centtal
America, Asia and the Middle East.
"A · mere enumeration of these
problems and the translatiOn of
them will takealotlt·tlmelnGeneva
and there wW 6e no time left fQr a
thorough ciiScusslonllftheproblems
uppermostln themlndsofthepeople
of the world," It said.
In another article, the gov~rn-

like a huge tog any advancement
towards disarmament and, moreover, make the nuclear arms race
an unconti'Qiled process,"Tasssatd.
"The United States Intends to
bqrden the Geneva meeting agenda
by bringing there a list r1 all silrts of
'problems' and 'questions,' the
number of which has already·
exceeded too doZen,'' Tass said.
U.S. officials have sought to

broaden the

ment newspaper Izvestia said
Washington was unable to recognize
the need to prevent an arms race In
space.
"One cannot, regard as a serious
ooe the U.S. proposal to conclude
agreement on some sort of 'open
la\XJratorles' under which the sides
would suwly each other the
Information on their programs,"
Izvestia · said. "What Is actually

.

ROYAL Vllfl' -

Prince Charles and Princess
Dt.. look at jewelry •rlns t.helr vlsll to lhe J.C.
Penney !!lore In lhe Springfield Mall near Washington,

D.C. yesterday. ibe royal couple was on hand to help
promote $lie rnWlon In British merchandise recenlly
purchased by the deparimenl slore dtaln. UPI.

By JUDY DUGAN
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Brl·
lain's Prince Charles and Princess
Diana, afterthreewhlrlwlnddaysln
the nation's capital promoting
Britain, looking good . and saying
Uttle, were oil today to Palm Beach,
Fla, for polo and more soclallzlng.
Charles was to play In an
afternoon polo match at the Palm
Beach Polo Club, where one of his
opponents, Kenney Mclean, of
Point Clear, Ala., promised "a
friendly game, buteveryontwlll be
out to win. The future king and
queen, whose presence brought on
near-frenzy among Washington
socialites who yawn at heads of
states, were to leave the capital at
mid-rooming. They arrive In Palm
Beach at. about noon EST, and
return home Wednesday to London.
Tonight, socialites who paid
$10,(XX) and more wW get to join the
Prince and Princess at a fund-raiser
ball on behalf or the United World
Colleges, slx'schools that promote
international peace through education. The schools are a favored
project of the prince.
A National Gallery dinner Mon·
day was the I'QYal couple's third
· black-tie dinner In Washington In as
many days, and crowds around the
entrance were much reduced from
earHer events - only about '150
onlookers.
They were treated to Dlana'sflrst

Schroeder suffers third stroke.
, " By LINDA WAGAR
·LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP! )
William Schroeder suffered a third
slroke and was in serious condition
t&lt;ilay In Humana Hospital Audubon
just two weeks before the first
anniversary of receiving his Jarvlk7 artlflclal heart.
cr scans Sunday night and
Monday revealed a hemorrhage in
the right side of the brain of the
world's longest surviving artlllclal
heart patient and he was returned to
the hospital from his nearby'
medically equipped apartment .
, · Hospital spokeswoman Donna
Hazle said Monday a hemorrhage
was found by the computerentianced CT scans ln a brain area
wiaffected by tWo previous strokes
In the past 11 months.
Hazle declined. however, to say
wliether the latest stroke affected
SchrOeder's movements. The earlier strokes slurred Schroeder's
sP,eech and left him unable to walk

without assistance.
Doctors ordered the cr scans and
other tests alter Schroeder. 53,
appeared sluggish over the
weekend.
The disclosure that Schroeder '
suffered his third stroke came as
Audubon was making preparatiOns
for the first anniversary of the Nov.
25, 1984, surgical Implant of the
Jarvlk-7 artificial heart.
Hazle said the cause a the latest
stroke had not been determined, but
since lt Involved' bleeding in the
brain, lt differed from the 7.arller
strokes ln which blood was-cut offto
part of the brain by clots that
apparently formed in the plastic and
metal heart.
The clots can break bose and
become lodged in the brain's blood
vessels.
Schroeder , a native of Jasper,
Ind ., received the .iarvlk-7 heart on
Nov. 2.'i, 1984. in surgery perl9rrned
by Dr. Wllliam C. DeVries, who

moved hls mechanical heart research to Louisville from Utah In
1984.
DeVries implanted the first
permanent artificial heart in Dr.
Barney Clark, a Seattle area dentist,
on Dec. 2, 1982. Qark lived 112 days.
Hazle said Audubon's second
artificial heart patient, Murray P.
Haydon, 59, of Loulsvllle, was
somewhat Improved Monday after
a recurrence of a recent bout with
fevers.
Audubon officials said Haydon,
who received his artlHclal heart
Feb.17, was continuing the weaning
process from a respirator, breathing on his own every other hour
during the lllurs he ls awake.
DeVries' fourth Jarvik-7 patient ,
Jack Burcham, 63, of LeRoy, TIL ,
died last Aprll, 10 days alter
receiving his Implant. DeVries has
Food and Drug Admlnstratlon
approval to perfonn three more
Implants at Audubon.

J;lorder patrol agents to be
dis~iplined in Medved affair
' WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Two
Border Patrol agents who forcibly
returned a Soviet seaman to hls ship
last month wlllllkely be disciplined
for "not following the guidelines,"
The New Yorl&lt; Times reported
toclay.
The two agents have not been
publlcly tdentllled.
•
"There obVIously were mistakes
made," by the agents, lmmtgratlon
and Naturalization Service CommlsstoJV&gt;r Alan Nelson told thr

"I'm expecting disciplinary actlon will be recommended," Nelson
told the Times.
Nelson, who ca lled the incident an
"embarrassment" to the INS1 said
he was delaying hls decision on how
to discipline the agents untU alter he
meets this week with the agency's
Southern regional director.
"We do think the existing proceduresarefundamentallysoundand ,
if properly followed , would have
avoided this," said Nelson. But he
added that the "very slgnlflcant
impacts'' of the Incident would lead
to changes ln INS procedures for
dealing with potent ial defectors.

charges the agents with acting
hastlly and violating agency regula: .
tlons by returning Medved to the
Soviet freighter without consulting
their supervisors, Reagan_admlnlstratlon offlclals told the Times.
"We consider ,;t'ls a very. very
serious mistake, said an unldentlfled Justice Department offlclal
quoted by the Times. I
Pun!shment.s for the two border
agents could range from letters of
reprimand to dlsmlssal, the offlclal
told the Times.
Nelson's report was requested by
theJustJce Department as part of an
inquiry into the Medved affair
ordered by AttorneyGeneralEdwln
Meese, who will review the report
along with Deputy Attorney Ceoera! Loweli.Jensen , Justice Department \l.flclals said.

.

.

to be brave for us," Reagan said.
"All we can do Is try to see that other
young men never have to join them.
Today as never before, we must
pledge to remember the things that
will continue the peace." ·
Reagan said those burled at
Arlington represent "victims of a
decision to forget certain things- to
forget, for lnstBnce, that the surest
way to keep a peace going ls to stay
strong."
"Weakness, alter all, ls a temptatloll," he said. "It tempts the
pugnacious to assert themselves.
But strength Is a declaration that
cannot be misunderstood." ·
Reagan's remarks to a hushed
audience In the sun- drenched
marbled amphitheater at the rernetery reflected the tlrm stance hls
advisers predict he will stakeout in
Geneva, Switzerland, at the Hrst
U.S.· Soviet summit ln six years.
"Through wha lever coincidence
or act llf tlmlng," he said, "I tell you
that a week from now when I am
some thousands of miles away,
believe me the memory and
Importance ol this day wlll be In the
forefront rt my mind and heart."
On Thursday even Jng, the presl·

"Our agents did make a mistake
In not following the guidelines,"
aft~ Mtroslav Medved,a Ukrainian
saU~r, jumped Into the Mississippi
ruver from the gratn freighter, the
Marshal Konev , near New Orleans,
Nelson said.

and Inside. had a prtvatetour.
~
,Diana seyly greeted store ern-l
ployees who lined the aisles.
I
She and Charles admired a bluet
two-piece maternity ootflt, raising a!
new round of speculation on whether :
Diana ls pregnant.
:
"Both of them did stop," said Jane ~
States, a s~lesperson. "He admired •
a powder-blue 'lady-in- walling' •
suit, and she remarked to him that ~
this ls the maternity department." '
"There was a little chuckllng" '
between the rouple, "but (CI\arles)
did inquire about the price" after
finding out It was maternity wear,
she said. The price of the suit was
$110.
Later In the day, Charles and
Diana went separatewaysforafew
hours.
Diana, joined by N311cy Reagan, .
Vlsltm a drug rehabilitation center
where she heard youngsters bare
their souls about drogs and ~!coho! ·
and saw them strive for survival.
Charles, meanwhile, went to the '
Library of Congress, wherehespent
an lllurdlscusslngthe U.S. Constltu·
tlon with Chief Justice Warren
Burger, Sen. Charles Mathias,
R-Md., Rep. Don Edwards, D-Calll.,
and historian Daniel Boors tin.
Afterwards, 'Charles and D!IIJla
made a Veterans' Day. VIsit to •
Arllngtdn National Cemetery where
the prince placed a wreath at the
Tomb of the Unlmown Soldier.

ByT.K. SANNAH
MONROVIA. Liberia (UP! ) State-nm radio said a former
Liberian military commander seized power In an early- morning
coup today and that President Gen.
Samuel K. Doe had gone Into hiding.
The sound of gunrtre echoed
thrOOgll Monrovia, the capital of the
West African nation and was heavy
near Doe's official residence, the
E¥Cu live Mansion.
Ben. Thomas Qulwonkpa. ln a
statement broadcast at 2:36 a.m.
EST on Liberia's Radio Elwa and
monitored by the Brltlshllroadcast ·
ing C9rp., said "the patriotic forces
as rt now have seized power.
"Our forces have completely
surrounded tlie city," the general
reportedly said. "Samuel Doe Is In
hiding. There Is no excuse tor him. I
call on the men and women &lt;:A the
, amiecl !ol-ces, the ~ force and

v

•'

'

•

1 white temole kitten, 6
weeks old, 304-676-7546.

To sell Avon. Call Marilyn

Government Homes from
$1 . {U iep·air) . Also delinquent tax property . Call

Need a good home for a year

Salea clerk and euhier part
time for new Christian Re cord Shop . Send i-esunie to
Box P-6, Point Pleasant
Register. 200 Main St. Point

Weaver, 304-aa2 -2845.

806-687-6000 E•t. GH-

Pleasant, W. Vo. 26550.

pet only. 304-882-3104.

304-675· 6768 for details.

I
I

I

RENT A CAR

Residential &amp; Commercial

AUTO
REtfTAL
St. Rt. 160 North

FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

I

I

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195
8-B·tlc

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

349 N. 2nd

Middloport
o!'OTTERY
•CLOCKS
•TOYS
•IMPORTS
tl·l-85·1 mo.

Patriot-Northup Rd . off Rt.

7111 / tfn

•Complete Remodeling
•Room Additions
• Roofing

•Siding ·

317 North St&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

MARCUM .
CONTRACTING
Ph. 985·4141
Free Estimates

JUST CALL!

10-.17 tfn

Rt. 124.Pomtroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24 -ttc

ACCENT

t'

FENCE I SUPPLY
PH. 992·6931
Afttr 5 Call

742-2027

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL

73-10 Chovy Tr.

73-79 Ford lr.

73-10 (hovy Tr.

73-79 ford lr.

73'10 Chovy. Tr.
H.oooh ......................... l150
73·14 Chovy Tr.
lumporo .....................$70
73-79 ChiVy k
Gr~l .. ..................... •31.50
73-79 Chovy. Tr.
«o&lt;klf Ponth ...............'2l
73·79 Chtwy. rr.
Call Cotntrt.................l20

10-IS ford Tr.

fenders .........................'41
Doors ......................... '1 00

FILL DIRT .

Doors ....................¥··· 'llS

ROOFING

•

Ooors .................. ..... ..$145

NEW-REPAIR

71-79 fo1d Tr.
Grillo ...................... SS2.SO
10-IS ford Tr.
Hoodo ......................... •145
13-15 ford Ianger
'
Hocidt......................... '130
13-IS ford Rang_~&lt;
.Grilt11 ........................... •1 l

Gutters - Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE .ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2969
4/ 19/ tln

WHALEY'S

. · 9-13-ttn

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

.

SANDWICHES

-

Addona and remodeling
Routing and gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing 1nd electrical

wo•k
(fre&amp; Estimates}

$

V. C. YOUNG Ill

LG. PIZZA w/one Item"""""

GUN SHOOT

992-UIS or 992-7314

Pomeroy, Ohio

12-B·tlc

co:J
Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.
t

EVERY
SAT." NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauce Shotguns Only
9-30-tf

"VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
'BLOWN IN
INSULATION

t
t

107

PHONE· 992~707 S

()on 'I Wtlk, W1lf at

Ch•n~s .Belnl L1te

L~' fJi,

-

'

FOR THE BOTH
OF YOU .
STYLING SALON

·

f

O'EUTOII
Iindo O'llrion &amp; Dobbio P'owtl

We Won 'I
~
H11lftfe. 10-21 -1 mod. pd;j
(
-

Mon. thru Sat. 9 AI! ·S PM

Tuts. &amp; Thurr. Nlfhts

PH. 949·2801
or 949·2860
No Sunday Calls

BOWMAN'S HOME CAll MEDICAL SUPPLY

F11 All

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine. Oh .
Ph. 614·843-5191
l0·6·tfC

f.l COIIfJDillnAl
PIIGIIANCY tEST
(.....Ns In 30 -t01l

ROOM 103
RUTLAND
CIVIC CENTER
lf!Ktln hv. 1 llours
......., 2 to 4

'Sat., 10 a.r~~.-12 " -

PII. 742·2629

10/ 10/ 1 mo. pd .

1 Card of Thanks

To all who voted
for, and, r

supporttd me 1n
the rtc•nt election •.
I. 0•."MIK" McCoy
Paid for by I. 0. Mac McCoy

&amp;

coal heaters .

SWAIN'S FURNIT-URE. 3rd . 992-8022.
8o Olivo St. Gotlipotis. Coli
614-446-3159.
General &amp;: . commercial
cle•ning service• for the
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS holiday se11on . Special
FURNITURE. Bodo, iron. rates for Senior Citlrens . No
wood, cupbo1rd1, chairs, job too big or om alt. All work
cheltl, b11ket1, dishes,

done to your satisfaction .
Call the Oust Busters 11

st:one jar1. antiques. gokl
and silver . Writt · M .O .

Miller. Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
46769 or colt 814-992·
7760.

now. Call 614-446-3486.

Reponenodt 77 Bondi•
14x70 thrH bedroom. S1 56
per mo . 74 Governor 2;

down, take over payment,. ,
Mid Ohio financial Service

Nel1on' • Hardwood floor
sanding, finishing. repair
wort , free estimates. Call

1-800·826-0752 or
772· 12.20t.

(81'4'~

. -

1 Ox60 New Moon 2 b~r .,,
new carpet. like new '
through out. Musl see tO ·
appreciate . Call 614 -446 1 •

Will do ~ousecleaning ­
STANDING TIMBER . AI Monday, ThoJdoy; Thursday 0175.
Tromm . Call : 614·742- &amp; every othir Sfitinday. 1977 Supreme. t4x70. 2 ·
2328.
814-985-4174 ...... . ft. 7 bd.rooma. 2 baths. Applitn, ;
p.m.
.. COl. SB500. 304·273-6957
Wanted: Band IIW for cutor 304-372-2429.
ting moot. 614-992-6338
aft. 2 p.m.
Must Sell :14x70 mobile
~

FinanciaI

Wanted uaed washers. dry ers , refrigerators, rtngea,
sweepers, working or not.

Colt 304-875-n44 ,

11

home.

3

bd.rooma.

11/f ,

1

:~!~~~s. w:a sh~~rn~ce~rt7ti '
21

· Business
Opportunity

8 t 4-949·2368.

..

MOBILE HOMES MOVED: ,
inauntd, reasonable rat•s:

Call 304-576·2336
'
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB· New 1986 Shannon, 14•70 ·
LISHING CO. rocomrnondo with 7x24 e11pando. 3 bed~
that you do businell with

room. 2 full baths, cathedr!W• .

to ~end money through the
mail until you have lnvesti-

hwasher. washer-dryer, llv~~
ing room suite, dining roOm-'-.
suite, central air, 2 sun
decks. vinyl underpennil}g.
apecial ordered with 6 inch.

peopta you know , ond NOT ceiling, microwave , dis • ..

Help Wanted

gatod tho olforing.
retume or apply to Medical

22 Money to Loan

Gottipotlo, Oh 4663t.

1971 Flamingo, t2x66, 3
HOME OWNERS·Refinonce bedrooms , AC, refrigerator.

wotls. Cotl 304·676·6373, ;:
a~ec

to kJw tiMed rata. UN equity

s1ove.

cond. deck plua .

23

1972, 1 2•65 Schultz mo·
bile home . u c. cond . Mu11 ,
see to appreciate. S6 ,000.
Call after 5:30 p.m. 304 - ·

poy. Sand re"'mo to P.O. for any purpo11. Leader other features. 614-446·.
Box 45 7. Pt. Ple11ont, WV. Mortgogo Co., 814·592- 0684.
26560.
30St .
A11ist1nt Manager Trainee .

We have 3 openlngo for

Professional
Services

Cllrl for inflnt 1nd toddler in
our home . Mutt be 1 nonsmoker. 1ftemoon1 and av-

Racine Gun Shoot tpon·

ce1 to boJC 700 in care of the - - - - - - -Cl•lllpolll Daily Tribune, 825 By owner. Must tell-moved.
Third Ave., Gallipolla, Oh 3 bdr. ranch, one car garage,

Ooorgu Cruk Rd .
814·448·0294.

11 /411 mo.

r~
•
MOTEL
'

tunlty to urn 1260-1300
wook. Mojor compony. No

Colt

oorod by Rooino Oun Club.

676 -6972.

t980 Tidwell 14•70 3 bedPIANO TUNING AND RE- rooms, 1 "h ba1hs, all elect·

PAIR . beck to school dit·
count&amp;, free estlm.tes.

ric, 9x 10 building .!lind 2

C)

z

i

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

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist
:z:
! (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601

- - - -- -·tc-

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

Syrocu11, Oh . Old permit·

·I

8-13 trn

AUTO
CENTER
810'12 West Main Streit, Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph- 614-992-6778

FALL SALE

73-80 GM 11UCII FENDERS .............. $39.00
DYNlln BODY FillER .............. .f:'!!;...... S6.SO
Jf• INCH MASKING TAPE ........... P!U...........99'
DUST MASK
.
.
5

.,lngo. Reply with roferon·

31

Homes for Sale

60% acral, 4 bedroom farm ·
house. barn, pond. tractor .
and equipment .
848 ,000 .00. Only those in :·r
terested . 0 . Freeman, &amp;o.~~: •
240 , Mt . Union Road , Pli11v:,

W. Va. 25158.
·.
watklng.dlstanco from Nol1h
1:00 p.m. Foetor'( Choke12
Claltlo 'High School. Reduced
•
gu1ge 1hotgun1.
Wanted : Woman to live In to to f29 .900. Colt 614-38835 lots &amp; Acniag'~ ~. :
care •for elderly lady in 8711 .
.'
No hunting on tho property J1cklon area . Raaaonable
of Frank and Helen Eberab- oolory. Colt 614·288-6379 Near Crown City , Ohio. 4 A.
ach or Tom AutMreon. or 814·2B8·2280. or write M-l . with 6 room new 6 acre s good frontage. rural •
Violator~ will be protecuted.
Jnn Hammond 2474 Pat- edition , well insulated . water, $3,500. Call 614tonovltto Rd .. Jackoon , Oh needs some minor finish 446 -4190.
Notlco:Thtro witt be no 46640.
work &amp; 8 rooms of old part
Every Sunday, beginning at

hUnting or tr..plning on
the old Eber Roulh term,
now the Mar-P1t farm in

lion tllpt •r• no longer

occoptod. Morjorlt A. Durot
ond Rolph D. Ll!vondtr.

MOBILE
MOVED,
In
au red. HOMES
FH10n1bl1
rll.l .
1-;:::;~-~t.;--~;;::l~-~~
3• D
Colt 304-&amp;78·2336 .

•

~

·.u

bath. all carpeted, air,
electric. large porch, Ilk•

18 Wanted to Do

delivery. Oavi1 Vacuum

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

14x70 Festival 3 bdr ..

bedroom $162 per mo. 81
Patriot 14x68 three bod'. '
room $196 per mo. $600

·Cieener, one h1lf mile up

992-2725

DOZER, BACKHOE.
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER,
GAS 8o SEWER LINES.
RECLAMAliON, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPME!IIl,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
8o DIRT "

$5 ,800. Call 6t4-446:9290 .

814·992-3723 aft. 4 p.m.

Buying daily gold, litver
.c oins, rings, iewelry,stertlng
ware, old coins, l1r91 cur·
rency. Top priees. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.

burner, ceiling fan. Ac.
underp'innlng , porc-h'.

porches. $11 ,000 . 304''
In peroon at 417 Second Ward'oKoyboord,304-675· 676· 7829 .
Avo. , Room 18, Gattlpotio, 6500 or &amp;76-3824.
SWEEPER end MWing m1· Ohio. Allh for monogar.
c;hlne repair. ' p1rt1, and
Farms for Sale ·
33
Rea l Eslale
oupptleo.
Pick up ond Moturo dopondobte lody to

169 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Oh.

J&amp;F

rooms end bath, total eleCtric. window air cond .• '12 ecre
ground, 17~e22 outbuilding.

WANTED TO BUY used

exptrNtnce. Prefer our own
methods. Care must . Apply

A.A.A.
304-675-6276

1978 Bayview 14•70,· J

Have vacancy for elderly in
my homa . Room. board &amp;
l1undry. Reasonable. 614-

614-446-3872

3 Announcements

•Live entertainment
' free HBO •Restaurant
•Olympic Pool

lot. New electriC

Colt 614-446-1425.
beoldo Eootorn High School.
Anytime. Call 6t4-985· 1973 Now Moon t2•8&amp;,
part . furnilihed, wood 3907 .

ANY PERM
KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

SINGLE 124,95

rented

furnace. AC. outbuilding.

Will baby-sit in my home,

An nu u n~e m e nl s

AT. 62 SOUTH
POINT PlEASANT, W. VA.
8 miles from
Pomeroy·Mason Bridce

1989 Vindalo 12•60 on

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Jim Mink Chev .- Oidslnc .
Bill Gene Johnaon

10% OFF

CONTRACTING

THANKS

614-992-3596.

aggreuive. mature lndividu ala who qu11ify to train 11
11111t1nt meneUers . Oppor·

NOW THIU DEC. 4

'

? PREGNANT?

Wanted To Buy

Electrlci•n• need•d . Top

3/2/ tln

·,

low utilitie1, eMc. cond . 0111

Nursing care In private
home . Room for two patient• . 8600 . a month. Call

Ple10. 203 Jackoon Pike.

992-3345
Sizes Start From 12'x16'

6785 or 304-n3-8430 .

notoglot, wookllayo. Sand

2lS Mitt St., Middloport
104 MulbHry .h., Pom•or

Crone, Xenia, oh . 46386..
.,

614-246-96'36 after 6Pitl.:

Ona 011ntfied Medical Tach -

and Graduation
Stationer,, Magntti'
Signo, Rubber Stomps,
lusinus Forms,
Copr Strw·ilts, h,.

c•

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

614-992-7314.

Serv 1 ~e'

y,, Pllwtl•t N11dt

2 bd.room house on Br~aa­
wey , Middleport . Larg}t
rooms, enclosed por«;hit,
range , disposer. ample

in10rance, educational opportunitlea, retirement pay
and other outatanding be·

V1cancy for the elderly in
our home. Trained and fif.
teen ye~ra experience. Call

EITIIJ IUYilll:ill

PIUS, Office Supplits &amp;
furniture, Wedding

We Deliver

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER SERVICE . Estate,

Pll. 992-3982
) ..
THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

'

(613-426-0426 aves.).

., Appt.

SAlES &amp; RENTALS
614-446-7283

Out ot Town Customers Call Collect
•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Beds •Wheel Chairs
WE Bill MEDICA II Ate OTHER INSURANCE
CARIIIRS WHEN EliGIBlE

lit""'

20% OFF
SElECTED PERMS

ing. Colt 614-992·2039 IQ'r

Join the West Virginia ArmY
National Guard. You receive

Mlddleporl, Oh. 8t4-992- 614-256-1642.
3478.

fiiUE STREAK CAB

Basha n Building

4/ 4/ tln

CARPENTER .
SERVICE

Subs - Steak · Stromboli
Ham &amp; Cheese - Pizza Bread
FREE Local Delivery

1·3-tfc

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

YOUNG'S

992-3559

flrlll e,ulpmant
Parts &amp; Ser-lea

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

wood

ANGIE'S
PIZZA
349 N. 2nd, Middleport, Oh.

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush H~&amp;
Farm Equipment
Dealer

appointment.

5 rooms &amp; bath in Pomerov..
Option to buy adjoinlnb
large concrete block build-

nefito. Colt 304-876-3960
1-B00-842·3619.
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAtlTV MOBILE HOME SALES:.
12
Situations
4 Ml. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
Wen ted
RT 36 . PHONE 614-44&amp;•7274 .
:

farm. Antique. liqutdetion
sales. Licenled Ohio end
Welt Virginia . 30•· 773-

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

"Free Estimates"

Installation Available

Howard L. Writesel

Don't let your military skills
go to waste. The Wast
Virginia Army National
Guard has vacancies for
qualified prior service indi·

Mallett .

or

4-&gt;·tlc

New ond lhtd luto Glan-latt Mod.J P01ts

~OGGS
SALES &amp;SERVICE

New Homes 'Built

"Free Estimates" .

Rt. 2 and Rt . 62 . Celt
304-676-1798"

PARTS and SERVICE

ftndtrs ....... ..................•41

Cat! 61 4-423-4t 59 for

futher details &amp; ask tor Mr.

a monthly paycheck. Ute

LOST, black and white fe male Walker in the vicinity of

8

992-3410

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

I

876-1888.

•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

ranch for sale lh
Plains. Extra nice. 3 ·
bd.rooms, 11h baths. garage, full basement, level (o•.
new chain link fence . .Financing available to qualj·
fied buyer. Price reduced fOr
immediate sale. low 40's.
Brick

Tupper~

or

male Coon hound. collar
missing, Flatrock area. 304·

•Ranges

ba~e­

ment, garage. newlv remodeled . Rocksprings aree .

vidualo. Colt 304·675·3960
bineto. Roborl Winn, 27.40
1-800-842-3619 .

FOUND brown and black

•Washers •Dishwashers

l t22 /tll

Tu11d1g Speclt/

Roger. Hysell
Garage

after 6.

All Maku

· We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies.
BUSINESS PHONE
(614)992-6550
RESIDINCI PHONE
16141992·7154

Ohio

Ptoaso catt 814-446-32t7

985-3561

SALES &amp; SERVICE

FOUND Rt . 36 neorRedman
Inn . Block female dog. Whito
chest &amp; pawt. Brown collar.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

HEATING

•Garages &amp; Pole
Buildings

~ong Bottom,

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp;

lCUT OUT FOR fUTURE USE!

3 bd.room home. Full

RN's applications now baing
accepted for pert· time em·
plovment. Call Pleasant Valley Hoapital, Penonnel De-

pol1mant. 304·675-4340,
ext. 308.

776. Catt 614-448-4888.

· Q·SA~E

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

LINDA'S
MEXICAN
POnERY &amp;.
GIFT SHOP

FOUND one white bilty goot.

"IV• Rw Forlrn"

RADIATOR • , DENNY CONGO
SERVICE
WILL HAUL
We can repair and recore radiators and
· heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

fiondty. Jackoon area. Cell
614-388·9746 .

CALL
446-4522

Gallipolis, Ohio

Opening• available tor demonetrators, no investment.

FOUND very large Gerffi_.n
Shepherd mix, male, very

9806 tor information .

614·992-2978 .

Earn free Christmas gift a, by
having a Meni Mac home or
Cltalog party. 100 p,e r cent
guaranteed line of gifts,
toya. home decor items. Call

6 Lost and . Found

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

condition, county water, oil
heat, on Rt. 7 , in Eurekf .

Cat16t4-446-2206.

Mele white rabbit, blue eyes,
to good home mutt be for

Massachusetts defeats anti·pom law

r-----------1

Homes for Salll'

To givHway white kitten.

old mate Pit Bull. Cat!
304·676·61 03.

dent Is to deliver a televised address
to explain hls summit goals.
He arrtves In Geneva Saturday
night but will not meet with
Gorhachev untU Tuesday. Reagan
leaves Geneva next Thursday and
wnt stop In Brussels, Belgium, to
brlef allled leaders and will address
a joint session of Congress when he
arrives In Washington.
Reagan placed a wreath Monday
at theTombofthe UnlmownSokller
on a hW overlooking the Potomac
River before addressing a crowd
that Included mllltary personnel,
veterans- some wearing Vietnamera fatigues- and their famllles.
His voice choking at times With
emotiOn, Re~gan said: "Let us pray
for freedom and justice and a more
stable world . And let us make a
compact today wltb the dead - a
promise ln the words !or which Gen.
(Matthew) Ridgeway llstmed: 'I
will not fail thee mr forsake thee."'
He recalled how, nearly five
months ago, he had witnessed the
return of the bodies of four U.S.
Embassy guards killed in El
Salvador, and said, "When a
serviceman dies, lt ~ a tear In the
fabric, a lreak ln the whole."
•

Military stages Liberian coup

31

Halp Wanted

peraon at Pat Hill Ford,
Middleport, Oh . Experience
n&amp;cellery . Stop in and pick
up application .

Calt 614·448-9287.

•

pornographic.
was very broad and very vague; :
By ROB STEIN
Coercion
of
participants,
traffick·
Hyde
said. "The law was very
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI) lng
In
pornography
and
a!jSBUlts
or
attractive
to people '!'ho would like
The defeat of an anti- pornography
atlacksattrlbutable
to
pornography
to
use
It
as
a censorship law."
law that would have allowed victims
also
would
be
subject
to
clvU
Barbara
Flndlen of the Women's
of smut to sue and collect damages
Alliance Against ·Pornography,
from distributors shows .'the rights )ienaltles.
Proponents
argued
the
measure
which proposed the measure, said
of pimps are stnt more Important
would
be
an
effective
tool
against
the group would decide within
than those of women ," the mea·
pornography
and
violence
agaln~t
several
weeks whether to start
sure's co- author charges.
women.
Opponents
said
the
meaanother·
petit tOn drive to put the
But Catharine MacKinnon, a
visiting Jaw professor at Stanford sure was too vague and unconstltu- Issue to another vote.
The vote in Cambridge was the
University In California, said sup- tiOna! and could be used to censor
legitimate
material.
first
time such a measure ha s been
porters wlll contlnuepushlng laws to
"This
vote
means
the
lights
of
put
to· a referendum vote. An
fight pornography and, "We Intend
plmpsarestlllmorelmportantthan identical proposat ·was twi ce apto win."
' The INS has submitted to the
About 100 people who had been those of women,'' MacKinnon said proved by the Minneapolis City
Council and twice vetoed by the
Justice Department a report, more
counting paper ballots by hand since Monday.
But
she
said
the
vote
was
close
mayor. A similar proposal apthan 100 pages long, detalllng the
Thursday finished their tabulation
enough
to
be
encouraging.
"They
proved In Indlanopol!s was later
agent' s mistakes. The report
Monday, finding a referendum on
the issue was defeated 13,031 to9,419. won, but not by much," MacKinnon rejected by fed eral cou rts. Another
The measure needed at least said. "I think that's Important for a ln Los Angeles was tabled by the
15,lXXl votes to be approved, said powerless group. We came very Board of Supervisors.
Allred Gerardln, election supervfs. "tlose and got a lot &lt;:A votes...
r--;:;::;:;:==;;:===~the seeurtty agencies to join the
~uiwonkpa was appointed
Sue Hyde of the Feminist Anti64 M'
lng auditor. Of the24,381 who voted,
111&lt;:. Merchandise
force ln the llberatlon of our people secretary-general d. the ruling 1,93lleft the pornography question Censorship Taskforce applauded
voters for turning down what she
from fear and brutBllty."
People's RedemptiOn Crun::ll In blank.
called
"a dangerous law."
Qulwonkpa said securtty forces October 1983 but refused the position
Residents of Cambridge, home of
"The deflnltlon of pornograpy
were sealing Liberia's borders and and was stripped of authortty ln the Harvard University and the MassaImposing a dusk-to- dawn cutfew PRC and the armed forces.
'
chusetts Institute of Technology,
and that Monrovia's airport would
Doe was an anny master ser- were asked to approve the proposed
Public Notice
be "closed until further notice," geantonAprU12)911J,whenheanda ordinance In balloting Nov. 5.
state-run radio reported.
group of fellow sergeants killed
The proposal would have enabled
In washington, State Department President Wllllam Tolbert In a
people who believed they had been
NOTICE OF
spokeswoman Anita Stockman ron- bloody pre- dawn coup and seized victimized by pornography to flle
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
firmed that an attempt to topple control of Africa's oldest republic, ctvn Iawsuttsseeklngcourtordersto
On
November
8. 198&amp; In
Doe's government was "In pro- founded In 1822 by.freed American StOJl the distribution d. material and
tho Meigo Counly p, 0 .,;,11
gress" lnlt reports from the U.S. slaves.
couect cash settlements from tlte
Court, Con No. 249'48,
Norm~~ Du Vromen 710
EmbassY were "very sketchy." She
In April the deputy commander of makers and distributors.
Third
Strut, Belpre; OH.
said reports Indicated all Amertcan the presidential guard sprayed
The ordinance defined porno411714 woo oppolntod Ext·
t:ltlzens In Liberia were safe.
Doe's car with gunfire outside his graphy as "asystematlcpractlceof
CUirlx of tho Hllto of Rom11
H-klno, dtct~Md, toll of
Qulwonkpa, commander-general official residence In Monrovia. Two exJll!&gt;ltatlon and subordination,
483 Ortnt Slrut, Mkldlt·
of the Liberian armed forces from guardswereserlouslywounded,but based on sex, which harms
pori. Ohio 45780.
April !!Ill until October 1983, 1s Doe escaped unharmed. Thedeputy · women.'' Explicit photos, as well as
Robert E. Bud&lt;,
thought to have led a thwarted commander, Col. Moses Flanza· any nuiterlalln which "women are
Probtll Judgo
ltno K. Nenolrood,
attempt to topple Doe Ill November ·f maton, was publicly executed by presented dehumanized as sexual ·
Ctork
1983, diplomatic sources said.
11rlng squad a week later.
objects" wwld be considered
(11)12, 19, 28, ftc

nines.

11

Giveaway

7

AUTO MECHANtC:Appty In 32 acres 3 bdrms. ni ce

Reagan drumming up summit support '
By HELEN'niOMAS
UPI While Houae Reponer
WASHINGT0N (UP) ~ President Reagan, leaving Saturday for
Geneva, Switzerland, says the
memory of America's war dead
·'will be In the forefront llf my mind
and heart" during hls sullll'illt with
Soviet leader Mlkhall Gorbachev.
To strenghthen his hand at the
superpower summit, Reagan ar·
ranged to brief key congressional
leaders of both parties today at 9: 30
a.m. EST, prior to an afternoon
Interview in theOvalO!fl&lt;;ewlthflve
European televisiOn corespondents.
The five journalists represent
television stations In Britain,
France, Italy, West Germany and
Switzerland.
The president took a break from
intense, pre-summit briefings Monday to commemorate Veterans Day
at Arllngton NatiOnal Cemetery.
Speaking to a Cl'Jlwd of nearly
6,(XX) people, Reagan salu tedAmertcans who died In four wars and
recent terrorist attacks as "victimS
of a peace process that failed. "
"All we can do Is remember them
and what they dld and why they had

4

proposed to us Is to legalize and
program the arms race In space."
Tass called ; on the Reagan
administration to "give up Its
non-constructive stand."
•
"As to the Soviet Union, It Is reallY
to see to It that the meeting \1. the
leaders of the two great powers
should be ef!tclently held andjusttf)i
the aspirations \1. the peoples," Tas~
said.

Royal couple off to Florida .
public words of her Washington .
VIsit.
· "Very good," she said SOftly,
when asked how she llked
Washington.
Charles cutoff any further answer
In a booming voice, saying, "Speakjngasher spokesman, shethlnkslt's
wonderful."
Charles spoke briefly In praise of
the gallery's "Treasure Houses of
Britain" exhibit, of which he Is a
patron. "There are so many
exquisite things In one place," he
said, squlntbtg slightly ln the glare of
television Ughts.
The 107 dinner guests were
prtmarlly contrlbumrs to and ofH·
clals of the National Gallery. The
few non-Washington guests Included actress Brooke Shields and ·
Olympic gymnast Mary Lou
Retton.
Shlelds, In white lace and ruffles,
said, ''I feel like tonight, my prayers
have been answered."
Retton, who said she got her
lnvltat!Qn "a few days ago," said of
the princess, "She's such a classy
woman. I look up to her a lot."
Charles and Diana began their.
final full day In Washington Monday
by driving to the VIrginia suburbs.
They visited a J.C. Penney store to
promote $50 million In British goods
purchased by the chain.
They were greeted outside the
store by more than G,OOJ admirers

The Daily Sentinel-

4

Giveawav

46831 ,

RN or LPN noodod

11

indlpent contractor to do
mobile inaur1nce euma on 1

pe11tlmo booloOaltla County
oroo . Fltxlblo houro. E.O.E.
R..pond to P.O. Box 370,
D..,bor, WI/A 25084.

rna•

Part·time
or female ,
flexible houra. No inveat·
ment. E8rning1 opportunity

needs remodeled with llrge
rap around porch. Large
50x35 concrete block struc·
1ure, g1rege with concre1e
floor &amp; upstairs &amp; tome
other out bullding1. Beauti·
ful view of Ohio River, along
St. Rt . 7. rurel w1terwith 2
wella available, liking

S35,000. Colt 814·251t684.

l - -- - - - -- -

3 acres M· l . tra il" ' hookup, ·

gorago . Catt 6t4-44G·· ..
2568 .
90 ft.• 300 It . lot in Racine'
with 28 f1 M44 ft . b81ement
and floor. alec. hook up
septic tank, water. Cali ''

St4-247-3861 .

e180·f300 per wHk otorl· 1 acre with house, 2 bdr .•
lng. Apply Mon.-Sot. To rural water. aeptic tlnk.
Eltctrotu• Corp., 4t7 Se- mobile home hookup,
cond Ave .• Room 18. Galli· *12,600. Call 514·388 · 41
polio. Ohio. 8:30·10 :00AM. 9866.

Pupploo Coltlo-Germon She·
phord. 6 wuko old. See:
Bob McCormick Rd. Drive Euy Aonmbly Work!
way up hltt bolklt IAGion, eeoo.oo per 100. Ouoronl .. d Payment. No EMpe·
Roulh Rooldonoo.
rionoo, No Sotu. Doteito
Fo• Torrltr: molt. whitt wit •end self-addressed
brown apot1 . Appro~e . 7 otompod envelope: Eton VI·
moo. old . Coli 814-378- 111 -715 3418 Entorprlu
Rd, Ft. Plorco. Fl 33482.
2646.

A handyman's opportuniW
for profit: Green School

.

---------,'
Ren lals

.'
Houses for Rent , ,

4 bdr. house In country

11 1

8250 mo ., pluo *250 dop· ·"
·
dlotrlct, 2 ltory houoe with Call 614-446-4864.
gar•u•. 11orm wlndowa, ,..
trig ., stove &amp;. washer

2 bdr .. unfrunished houn '"·

UO.OOO or boot offer. Cott with garage. Ref. &amp; Oep'"'~'
required . Coli 614-44• :.0
814·448·2025 or 814-245- 9686
,
D
II
9180.

- - - - - - 1--,-----·
.
,,
' .•.

�Tuesday, November 12, 1985

l"'omeroy Middleport, Ohio

l"age-H-1 he Uaily Sentinel
41

LAFF-A-DAY

Houses for Rent .

64 Misc. Merchandise

Homes for rent: Ver:y com·

Firawood-cutup . olobo. 1
truck lood •100. 2· •180.
Pickup load. you houl I 1I .
HEAP ecceptad. Call 614·
246-&amp;804.

fomfortoble. 3 bdr. • 2 botho.
family. room .. 2 dlr garage.

Eny to hoot. 3 bdr .. family
room wi1h woodburner. gar·

ogo. 4 bdr .. 3 botho. 2fomily
room, 2 fireplaces, privacy.
3 bdr. brick with 2 flreplo·
ces. family room, garage. 4
bdr .. 2 botho, family room. 2

HouH COli. lump • stoker.

Zlnn Coal Co. Cell &amp;1 4-446·
1408.

fireplaces. walking diatanca

I ueSday, November 12, 198!,; •

66 Building Su~plies

KIT 'N' CARLYLI! ®111 Lllri'J

like new. dinette oet. 2
wheal troller, pop-up

bdr .. 1 ctr garage , country

camper, no top, make n .

atmosphere, •••v to heat.
Refenc.es &amp; d•posit re-

utility traitor, draft boer
oystem, oddo Ia ondo furni·
lure. Coll814-2&amp;6-6413.

quired . Wiseman Real Ettete

Agency. Call 61 4 - 446'·
3644.

Mid Novombor Spec lot. 500
lb. protein blocko, 167.50 .
Gueroy glov11 99 oont 1 polr.
I In: stove pipe 81 .76 a
oectlon. Found only at Bid ·
well Cooh F11d Store, 61 4388·96B8.

3 bdr. carpeted .. natural gas,

'h mi. outofclty on Rt. 141.
S 225 mo. Call 61 4-446·
2034.

WAS ANGELTOP•s·

Home
Improvements

maoonry eupplleo. Mountoln
Stoto Block. Rt. 33, New
Hoven W. Va. 304-B822222 .

P'.IJI.THIIR-

66

11/12/85

•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

EVENING

e:oo uNewo
Cll (J) ma

Unconditional lifetime guarantH. Local references
furnithed . Free aatimates.

Pets for Sa 1e

D,and M. Contr1ctor1. Vinyl
aiding, repla~;ement win·
dows, insolating, roofing,
new and remodeling, con -

CAPTAIN EASY

Dreema'

crete. Call304-773-6131.

6:D5

(JJ Green Acres
(!l Revco's World Claos

ing; vinylsidjng, •torm doors .
and windows. Free estl-

mateo . Coli 614-992-2772. ,

Women
(J) • (jj) ABC News
(J) ®l CBS News

a

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING .

ill) Body Electric
•Text
[HBO) MOVIE: 'Something
Wicked Thlo Wrrv Comes'
6:36 CIJ Carol Burnett
7:00 Dill PM Magazine
CJJ ,.COUrtohip of Eddie's
Father
(!l SporteContor
(J) Entortalnment Tonight

guorantlld.· Call 304·273· ·
2811. Revonaw9od, W. Va. ,

4 room houu for rent in

44

Syracuse. Ohio. Coli 614992· 3981 .
Mlddleport·2 bd.room, 111.
floor duplex. Vord. UOO.
pluo dopoolt . 614 -992 ·
7177 oft. 6 p.m.

67

Apartment
for Rent

Mercilon!llst:

JACkSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equol
Houoing Opportunity(
monthly rent st1rt1 at * 1 69
for 1 bodroom and *204 for
2 bodroom, dtpooit S200,
located near Spring Valloy
Plazo ond Foodlond, pool
ond Coble TV evollablo.
office houn as possible 10

2 bd.room. 1"h bath home
on Pleount ridge In Pomo·
roy. 8260. per month plus
utilities. Reference and dop·
oait required. No pets. 6149~9 - 2646 .

Efficiency coH~o. t55.00
w,..k·, utilitioo paid. phone
304·675· 3100 or 875 ·

am to4pmand7pmto9pm

Monday-Friday. Coli 814446·2745 or loeve
message.

5~09 .

For rent with option to buy.
4 . bedroom. 2 car garage.

Nicely furnished mobile
homa, aH. apt .• central air
and heat in city, aduhs only.

bulh In kitchen, Iorge lot,
ro(nt 8215 .00 . 1100.00 Coll614-446-0338 .
deposit . Solo p r l c o l - - - - - - - - - 1!6,000.00 or on lend Redecorated ap1 .• 2 bdr .•
e&lt;intrect with down · pay· S150 to t250 . Call 304·
mont. New Hoven. coll304· 675 · 5104 or 304-675·
6386 or 304· 675-7898 .
8~2-2686 .

Lorge 2 bdr. opt .. 2 bath.
fully carpeted, refrlg. Ia
tat . 2'h batho, Iorge family otove. 1 1 Court St .. t326
r6om two kitchens . mo .. ref. • dep. Call 614U50.00 monthly. Colt304- 446-4928 .
675· 4340. extonaion 368, 1 - - - - - - - - - Attractive 4 bedroom home
near High School and Hospi·

wftekdays between 8 a.m. Upataira unfurniahed apt ..
carpeted, all utilities peid, no
a~d 6 p.m .'

children, no polo. Call 81 4·
3 bedroom brick ranch. full 448-1637.

1----------

basement and g•rage, re·

fronceo required. 304-895· furnlohtd 3 roomo Ia bath,
3.51 .
clean. no pets. adultl. ref. &amp;
depoolt . Coli 614-446 ·
Home and trailer spot. 304- 1619.
675· 6720.
1-------2 bedroom largalivingroom,

largo kitchen. oil electric,

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

completely furnished, newly

Furnished, AC. cable, no city
ta~8a. beautiful river v-· in
Kanauga . Fosters Mobile
Home Part.; . Call 614-U&amp;·

redocoratod. U2&amp; per
month pluo dep . Ref ..
odulto. 4&amp;B 2nd. Ave. Coli
614 44• 2238 614 4•5
or
· ~ ·
2&amp;81· . g·

1 - - - - - - - - --

1602.

New efficiency apt . Call

61 4-448-0390.

2 bdr . 14x60 ell electric
trailer. nice wood burner in
Uvingroom, on private lot.

On Rt. 218 , 6 miltl from
town . Coll614 ·256-13 ,

2 bedr~m 1pt. utility room,
water furnished, Mttchell

Rd . Coli &amp;14-446-1910 or
61 4 -379-2248.

Coll614-446-1364.

Furnlohtd efficiency apt ..
private &amp; quiet. lingle working poroon only. Call 614·
446 -4807 or 614- 446 21102.

2 bdrm., partially furnished

Furnished apt., 4 room &amp;

2 bdr. 1 mile from
ital,
washer -dryer. w1ter 9 tT11h
paid, S200 rent and depo1it.

mobile home for rent In Rio

both. 111 floor . 10&amp;8 lot.
Grande . Carpet. natural gas A
0 111 11 Oh
ond storm windowo. Coli 1- -v•_·_·_ 1 _;p_o_J.__·_ __
61 4-245-9461alter &amp;PM or 2 bedroom apartments.
814-446-4733, 8· 5PM .
New Haven, WVa. Newly
romodelod . In town . 814·
2 bdr. with 1 2x1 5 odd-on 992· 7481 .
room, utility lhed It garden
IPIICI, rural area, 2 mile

from Contenory. Coli 614·
446-0282 .
Furniehed 2 bdr. trailer on
Old 180 near Porter. private
lot, married couple no kid or

peto. 1200 mo. s100 dep.
wotar peld. Coli 614· 388·
9060.
2 bedroom furn .• air. utllitlee

paid. aduho only. Coil 814·
446-4110 .

Furnis~d

Apartment for
reht. no children. Av1ileble

oftor Oct.3. Coil 614-992·
2749 .
2 bd.room furnlahed Apt .

61 4-992·&amp;434 or 304·882·
2566.
Stone Wooda Apanments.
Senior Citizens and mobility

impaired unitl. 1100 Powell
St., Middloport, Ohio. Equol
Houolng Opportunity .
Farmers Home Adminiatrl·

2 bdr. 2 mlleo from Hohor tion. Monogod by Arthur

Hotpitel at

Evergreen .

Children sccoptod . Coil
614-446-3697 or 614-246·
5223 .
3 bedroom, e~~~;pando, woodburner, garage, fenced yard.
garden, fruit treea. Depo1it

and referencoo. Coli &amp;14·
949-3031.
3 bedroom. completely fur-

niohad. No palo. Coli 614·
949-2253 .
2 bd .room trailer. new
energy guide furnace. 1176.
plu1 utilitlea and dapotit .

614-6&amp;7-3487 .
2 bd . room mobile home near

Racine . 614-949· 2848.
2 bedroom trailer. 65•12,
14 Burdette Addn anytime.

Howard Winer and Auoc.

P.0 .8ox 1007, Moriotte,
Ohio 45750. 1-61 4-373·
6111 .
In Mlddleport-1 bd.room
Apt. UtilitiH Inc .. t220. per
month, pluo deposit. &amp;t4 992-7177 oft. 6 p.m.
3 bd.room Apt. for rent in
Syrocuoe. 614-992· 7889
oft. 5 p.m.
2 bd.room turnlohod Apt.
Reol nice. Aduho only. No
polo. Rt. 124. Minorovllle,
Oh. 614-992-3324.
APARTMENTS. mobile
homes, hou11t1. Pt. Plua1nt

and Gollipollo . 61 4· 446·
6221.
2 br 1partmentt in Hender·

Csll 304·676·8372.

oon. 304-876-1972.

2 bedroom all alec. 1136.00

Nice 1 and 2 br apartmentl

plul utilitie1, 304 -676-

4088 .
Mobile home for rent, 2
bedroom. Crab Creek Road,

1145.00 month. 304-57&amp;·
2219. County water.
2 tcre mob'le home lot on
Greer Road. water It 1eptic

oyotem. no . 00 month .
304· 836-5937 alter 7:00
PM.
14x86 2 bodroom mobile
home in Henderaon, unfur-

niohad with woohor ond
drYer, deposit 1nd reference

required. 304-&amp;76·1730.
44

Apartment
for Rent

Furniohed opt. 2 bdr.,131'11
41h, Gelllpollo. •196 woter
paid. Coli 448-4416 oltor
7PM .

·

downtown . 304-675-2218
• 8-6
46

Furnl1hed Roome

For 11nt Sleeping Rooms

and light houoa k-Ing
rooms. Perk Central Hotel.

Coli 614-446-07&amp;11 .

Callohon'o Uoad Tire Shop .
Ovor 1,000 tireo, oizoa 12.
13, 14, 1&amp;. 16, 16.&amp;. 8 mllea
out At. 218. Coll614-2&amp;6·
6251 .

61 Household Goods

For ula waterbed . Ctll
SWAIN
614·245-6693.
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 1-:--- - , . - - - 62 Olive St .. Gallipollo. New 25. cu.lt. chell freezer, 1
Ia utad wood-cool otovao, 6 baby bad. drop leaf moho·
pc wood LR ouHo '399, geny table oxtendo to 8 ft .,
bunk bodo t1 99. ontron Meyt~ wringer waohor •
recliner~ 899. new a. used tub, bedroom auite combodroom oulteo. rengeo. plato, 30" rollewoybod. Coli
wringer woohero. • ohoeo. 614-441-0836 or&amp;14-446·
NeW livingroom auite1

11 99-1&amp;99, Iampo, a too
buying coal • wood otoveo.
Coli 614 ·448-31&amp;9 .
LAYNt''S FURNITURE
Soloo ond choiro priced from
t281i. to 1896. Toblos, 150

1983 Pontiac Porlolenite
mint cond. low mlloage,
loaded. Call &amp;14·367-7226
ofter IPM.

At Brunlcardi'o ..... No rap'oo- 1---~-----'-­
oeolld plano glmmicko. Just 1980 Chevouo. 4 dr .. AM-'
honest plano voluoo. We art FM caooette. •2.000 nogoli·
ne- under sold I Brunicordl able . .Call 81 4·446·8049
Muaic Inc. Comer 3rd. Ia oltor &amp;PM.
Court St .. Gallipolio, Ohio.
1973 Pontile Venturo body
Saxophone alto ••· cond . txc .. new p 0int, PS, PB, olr.
king inllrumento. Coli 814· 350 motor. Call 614·2&amp;824&amp;-&amp;149.
.
1922.

1-:----------

1983 Oodgo Colt 4 dr.,
34,000 mlloo, 4x2 trono.
1
Call614-448-7414.
1_12__4_.-:--- - - - 'Remington upright plono, 1~--------I'
WhHo iingle canopy bed 5150. Call 614·4411-2025 1978 Muotang. t1.950.
Call &amp;14·388·98&amp;6.
complete. Double bed, or 614-246·9160.
couch, &amp; chair. Atori 2800.
Call614-446·3861 .
19n Ford Mullong n11d1
work on body ond engine,
59
For Sale or Trade V-6,
outometic, good tiroo.
For Sole: split firewood. 140
par pickup load dolivorad. 2
t500. Call &amp;14-441·7141.

and up to $12&amp; . Hid•·•- mi. N of Silver Bridge on

Wurlltzor Studio plena, exc.
cond. Coli &amp;14-388·9790.

'7401do Toronado, AM ·FM.
PS. PB. olr. cruloo, power

be do, t390. ond up •to Uppor Rt. 7. Ceilll14-446t660 .. oofe bodo 1145, 9846 alter 6pm.
Rocllnero. 1221. to 1375.. 1----....:.._ _ _ __
Lompo from t28 . to 1126. Used hoopHel bod, 830,
pc. dlnoHeo from *109 .. to good cond. Coli oftar 5,
435. 7 pc. 1189 end up . 614-388-8838.
Wood toblo with olx choiro 1 - - - - - - - - - *285 to *746. Desk 811 o 50 per cent offl Flnhing
,up to S225. Hutchoo, *660. orrowalgno 02&amp;9111 Ughtad,
Bunk bad completo with non-arrow U47. Unlighted
maHrtuoo, 0276. ond up to 1199 . tfree letterol) See
1396. Baby bodo. *110. locally. Umitad quantity.
Monreuoo or box eprlngo, Hurryl 1(8001 423-1063.
full or twin, $63., firm, t73.
and .83. 0.-n uto, l226. Mixed hardwood olebo, 812.
4 dr. chelts. •49. 5 dr. per bundle, containing ap·
chens. *59. Bad frame•. prox. 110 ton, fob . Ohio
t20.ond 025., 10 gun. Gun Pallet Co .. Pomeroy, Ohio.
cobinoto, 13&amp;0. Gao or Phone 614·882-6461.

1984 Renault Encoura
6 opel.. . hlg~woy
aeatt, 466 motor. make moluge, 111111 cond. Book
offer. GE portobloconvorto- value with oil adjunmontl
ble dlohwoohor. 304·&amp;75· 14.900. Coot now 19.800.
11754.
SM weekenda. Firm price
*4.000. Coli 1114-446·
2&amp;46 .
Fm11 Siipplii'S
1980 Plymouth TC3 47.000
I'&gt; L1vesluck
mlleo. 4opel. 1882 Oodge
Omni 2 dr .. 88,000 milu.
1 98&amp; Plymouth Touriomo.
61 Farm Equipment 2.2, 5 opel .. 4,000 mMu.
Coli 614·379-2726.

electric range a 8 376. Baby

mottreuoo, 026 1o U&amp;. bed Boyo oize 8 ~ jeans Ia
frameo t20. 02&amp;, • uo. Lodieo Dingo booto, size 6.
king frame 150. Goodoolec· ,_v::-G_c-::._6_1-:-4-·9_9_2_
· 34_2...,.
9_._

Hollond. Buoh Hog Soleo Ia

tion of bedroom suites, 1
rock era, metal cabin eta, For S1le:treezer beet: $2.46

ulld equipment. Lorgell
oelectlon In S.E . Ohio.

htodboordo t38 • up to lb. lido of Harford boaf.
16&amp;.
Groin flttenad for 8 weoko.
Cutondwrappad $1.25 . 1b.
UMd Furniture -- BedroOm 304-nl-5131 .
suite. 1 oat of 1obln, 1 - : - - - : - - - : - - - - dr,uor. • bod. metal office For Sole:9 .76x16.5 rimo.
dooll. 3 mlleo out Bulavlllo lugo &amp; canters. &amp;200. 614·
Rd. Opon 9omto 5pm. Mon. 949-2990.
thru Sot.
814-448-0322
Rom. 742-30 .06, ollng Rod·

1---------field Acco Track ecope. LN .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES t600. 61 4·992·3861 .
Woohoro. ·dryoro. rtfrlgtro· 1 - - - - - - - ----- tors. ranges. Skaggt Ap·

Atari T.V. geme . 13 new

plioncoo, Upper Rlvor Rd. cartridgoo&amp;acceoo'o. 1100 .
boolde Stone Croll Motel. Call 614·992· 253t oft. 5
814-446-7398.
p.m.
County Applionce, Inc . TONY'S GUN REPAIRS,
Good uaod opplionooo and hotdlprebluolng, alltypeoof
TV oat•. Open BAM to 6PM . gunomlth work, foot aorvice,
Man thru Sat. &amp;14-446· 304-67&amp;-4831 .
1&amp;99, 627 3rd. Avo. Gom-1-:---------polls, OH.

Serioua about loaing
weight? Contact Gloria

Valley Furniture, new &amp;.
uad. Large section of quality furniture. 1216 Eastern

Grote. Rt. 2, Box 282,
Letart. wv. 25253. 304882-3152 .

Ave., Golllpollo.

Lump hou .. coal, dltliver any

30 ln. electric ronge whitt amount. 304· &amp;76-7397 or
U5. 30 in . . electric range _6_7_5·_1_2_47_._ _ _ _ __
hsrveot gold e95 , 30 ln . 1
electric rant• coppartone

Grain fed Holllaln ateen. 60

like new 8125, 36 ln.
otoc:tric range white t95 ,

cento lb ·on foot. •1.11
hanging weight. 1975 Mer-

Whirlpool washer· dryer tat

cury Marquis, 81 ,000.00 .

8190, QE Wllhor OVOGidO

304·675-9704.

green 8160, Kenmore dryer

89&amp;, Speed Queen dryer
t9&amp;. kelvinotor dryor 165,
Gibton refrigerator white

•t&amp;. Gibson refrelgarator

SURPLUS. regulor army co ·
mouftoge. denim clothing.
boota, packa, ac;ca11or .. a.
Camouflage insulaited cove-

whHt f~olfrH 1150, refrlg- rollo &amp;30 .. kldo camoufloge
trttor 11de by tide white ell olzeo . Sam Somerville,
•196. Kelvtnetor avocado
green 8126. portatable
dllher washer *915, smell
Wllher·dryer 8190, Kan·
more gaa dryer •&amp;a. freezer

upright whit• 1B cu .lt .
t110 . Skoggo Appliance.

Eaat·Revenawood, juhction

lndependonco Rood-Old Rt.
21, Fri, Sot.-Sun, 1:00·7:00
PM . FrH delivery Point
Pleasant area. 304- 67 5-

3334.

E-Z Credit Mollohan Furni·

Uud. 8 It gorogo dooro
140.00 each . Hoover opin
dry w11har 1150.00. Office
dooko metal f100 .00 each.

turo, Rt. 7 North of Golllpolio . Coll614-446· 7444 .

ter t50 .00. Uotd 3 It eolid

Upper River Rd., Oalllpolis,

614-446· 7398 .

20.8 cu.ft. frea1er, chest

Remington electric typewri·
entrance doors
each . Che1t of

*86 .00
drewera

typo, Rhoem modal . Call 1&amp;0.00. Red Oevel point
614-448-3112 alter &amp;PM . . ohoker 8t 75 .00. 2 .6 cu foot
refrigerator 160.00. 304·
King tize weterbad. book · 676· 2406.
cate headboard, wevele11
mattre11, me"reas p8d &amp;

aida pado. 1376. Coil 614 ·
256-6608 alter 7PM .
Country style oak furniture.

Kenmo~e sawing machine,
cabinet model, does every-

thing like

now . Faddoro

1160 btu air cond, 304-

446· 3286. .

hond creltad and finlohod.
antique reproductions. Paul
Conkel. Rt . 7, Tuppert

Pill no.
27 in. Wllliomoon cool Ia or
wood furnace. Brick lined.

No.1 shape. Priced on in· '
epectlon . 11 4-992· 7388 .

CROSS• SONS
U.S . 35 Well. Jackoon,
Ohio. 114-266-6411 .
Mauey Ferguson, New
Service. Ower 40 uted ·
tflctort to chooH from •
complete line of new &amp;
Special 10% diacount on all
parta for Cllh 11lta only,

until Nov. 15.
4x4 tractor, S&amp;OO.
814·388·8248.

Coil

Good I H aingle row corn-

picker. Coli &amp;14-379-2424.

lo~dod.

1974 Chevy lmpola. 4 dr..
3&amp;0 engine. 47,000 oct.
miles, PS, P 8, AC, good care
11,500. 1974PU,newtono.
goodtlreo, nowbralloo,good
tronoportotlon. Coli 614·
246-5&amp;59.

livestock

dreater, chett of drewere,

dook. queo.~ 1111 matt .
oat,(LNI. 1126. 614-742·
3092.

Mobllo homo lot, 1 2'~50 ' or
omolltr, *7&amp; wstor paid. 4th
&amp; Noll, Gollipollo. Call 446· l-,-:---:---,----4416 ofter BPM .
Antiques
63
COUNTRY MOBILE H o m e l - - - - - - -- 1'ortc. Routo 33. North of
Pomoroy. Lorgo lots. Coil Moving: 19 20'1 •• Goo
Pump: original; 17'x20'
814·992-7479.
hand-hewn log cabin; oall
B. • D. Troller Park, 11'11101 roll-top dook 110 ln.l: rope
loll for rent, 304· 67&amp;· bad: cupboard. ·11 4·24&amp;·
9448 .
21144.

Building Meterlolo
Block. brick, 1ewer pipes,
windowa, flntela, etc .

Claude Wlntora. Rio Grenda,
0 . Collll14· 248·11 21.
Kentucky.Lump, Ohio ~ump,
Ohio Stoker. Yotd or dellv·
ery,

cement

blocka

and

building motorial. Gelllpollo
Block Co., Pine St .. Oalllpo·
llo. Ohio Coli 1114-4411·
2783.

Trucks for Sale

1976 Ford F-100 otondord
b'ans; air.

new paint, good

tiroo, 11,600. Coli 614·
44&amp;-2300.
198&amp; Chav. C-10 pickup
14WD) block with charcoal
Int., Silverado, AC, PS, PB,
auto, slid

in,

rear window,

1976 Chevy Silverado 1 ton.
duolly with King cob ,
14,600: Coli 614-446 2107 or 1114-245-5600.
1970 GMC 'A ton. 4 op. flat
bod P .u . Good body • bod.
NNdo boH .. owitch Ia colo·
nold. *4&amp;0. 614-1187-3487.

•

speed

rear

tor peru ,

RINGLES'S SERVICE, ex·
ing !including hot tor
application) 304·675-2088
or 675· 7368.
vice, landscaping. 304 -576·
2010.
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed same
day . Pump uletand a&amp;rVice.

ANNIE
~ IT

Wll5 USED FOR HIDIN' .
IWNAIWIY SLAVE~ ESCIIPIH'
10 TH' NORTH,

siding, continuous ·gutter,
room additions. aofflt and ;;
replacement windows. 304- ,

Carpentry, Remodeling,
Room Addition, All building
• repeift. Cement &amp; Block
work. Free Ettimata. 304-

ac,

pl.

pb,

t4.300. 304-1176-11428.

MovlnJ: 1881 More. Cou·
TOP : CASH paid for '80 gor, -R7, orlglnol cond.
moko of"'r: 1 978 Chev
model1nd newer used Clrt.

Malibu Station Wagon (ICO·

Smith Bulck-Pontloc. 1911
Eostom Ave .• Gollipollo. Cilli
614-4411·2282.

nomicall t1,900.00. 014·
248-8448.

CIJ

New Price Ia Right
CD
(J) Jeopentv
(]) Nightly Buolneoa Re·
port
®l Wheel of Fortune
• iDI Price lo Right
• WKF!P In Clnc:lnnati
7:36 CIJ Sanford and Son
8:00 D (])(I) The A· Team The
team helps out wresller Hulk
Hogan in battling mobslers
down Hulk's Boys Center.
(60 min .l ·
CJJ Daktari
(!l AWA Wreotling
CIJ • Gil Who'o the Booo1
(CC) Port 2 of 2 Angela's
ex-husband Michael st·
tempts lo gain custody of
Jonathan.
II CIJ ®l North Beach lnd
Rawhide Part 1 of 2 A
former convict operetas a

Get your carpet in ahip shape ' ·
with Captain Steamer, furniture cleaning-water damage

cattle ranch designed to re·
lonn dolinquanl youths. (60
min.l
Cil
MocNoii·Lohrer
Newohour
liD Nova: Child Survival
(CCI The Unitad Nations
hss
Children' s
Fund

40&amp; Main St. downtownJ't. · ·
Pleount. 304-675-5252 . • ·•
Plumbing
8o Heating

paper·with io·
morrOWS raCI%rJ

good g11 mUe1ge. guaran·

Cor. Founh and Pine

INd 30 doyo. t4000. Call
&amp;14-387-0491 .

Gelllpolio, Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or
614-448-4477

79 Chivy converaton van,

7e Ford PU. Call 61 4-446·
2J&amp;B .

diseases. 160 min.l
• MOVIE: 'Jenny'o War'
Part 1 of 2
[H80) MOVIE: 'Sudden lm·
pact' !CCI
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Adven·
wroo of Hucklebarry Finn'
8:05 CIJ NBA llatketbeil: Phol·
nix It Now Vortl
8 :30 (]) Championship Roller
Derby
Cil • (jj) Growing Paino
(CC) While on e weekend
lrip, Maggie and Jason panic
when they call home and
none of tho kids answer the
phone .
9 :00 8 (])(I) Riptide The guys
investigate a chain of dealhs
connected w~h a food addi·
live research team. (60 min.l
CD 700Ciub
Cil
(j2J Moonlighting
(CCI
0 Cil ® MOVIE: 'Wild
Horses· (CC)
Cil Nova: Child Survivol
ICC) The Uniled Notions
Children's
Fund
has

Can't hurt
to humor
her!

Do you have a

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1, Box 355, Galli·
polio. Coll614·367· 0576 .

WINNIE

e

launched a drive to save the
lives seven million children a

E"'nrudl, Tenne11ee trailer
w~h

loto of utr11, *1 ,950.
Collll14·388·8711 .
2· 1983 - XR 100 Hondo

motorcycle•, tliiC. cond. Call

a14-44&amp;-8247 .
1.981 Hont!o CM 400 E with
full fooo helmet, 304-675·
1038 oftorl p.m.

J .A.R. Construction Co ..
Rutland . Oh . 61 4· 742 ·

year who die from curable
diseases. 160 min.)
® Wor: A Commontarv by
Gwynne Dyer: Goodbye
Wer (CCI The causes and
consequences of the lost
two world wars ere ana·
lyzed to illustrate wity na·
tions gc&gt; to war. (60 min.l
10:00 D (II CD Remington
Steele A hazy Remington
may
lost the detective
agency in en. ell-night poker

2903. BAilment•. Footers ·
Conc;rete work. Backhoe's: •
•
Do1er &amp; Ditcher, Dump
trucks. &amp; water-gas-sewer· ~.:
electrical lines.

BARNEY
86

General Hauling

I'LL

GIT

YOU LITTLE

VOU ALL

~;..o, VARMINT!!

PINNED UP, TATER· ·
GRAB MY HAT AN'

Hondo 50, good cond.
117&amp;.00. 304-675-3898 .

Awllll

hi••

we'LL GO

game he can't remember.

76

Boataand
Motors for Sale
---------

150 min.)

({)• Gil Spenur: For Hire
Ken ' I Water Service. W811s
cisterna. pools filled. Phon~

John boot for oale. Coli
&amp;14·26&amp;·64,7 .

61 4·367·0623 or 614 -3677741 night or day .

76

Waugh's Water Service
Wells, cisterns, pools. Fast.
reliable 1ervice. Call 614:

Auto .Parts
II&amp; Acceuo(ies

3 bdr. carpetad,' noturel gao,
'h mi. out of cHy on Rt. 141 ,
1226 mo . Call 1114· 446·
2034.
Old ltylo Chevy Ralloya,
304·678· 6858 . .
Newly rebuilt 307 CID
Chevy motor. 400 T.H.
tr1nami11ion · alto

rebuilt,

304·67&amp;· 6858.

two wortd wars are an&amp;-

266·1240 or 614 · 256 ·

Limettone. sand, gravel .
ton &amp; up

hGUIB COli . 1

19811 Cougar, 112,988 1981.ChovrolotCoprlcCiu·
payoff, or may orronge take ole, low mllaaga. AT, AC,
tNar poymento. Owner lold· AM·FM tepa, Crulu•. 304·
off. Coif 114·2611·11034.
175· &amp;11111 or 871·6440.

19711, · 20 It Fleet wing
comp•. ful oizo -nlng,
U,IOO.OO. 304·B82 ·
3180.

..

..

79 Motors Homas
8o Campers

·1977 Prowler. 20ft. Too
meny lXI I'II to llot. EC. Call
114· 941· 3087 alt. 6 p.m.

HOL-OCAUST?

Dump tru.;::k, h'auling 18 , .

vice. 304-675· 3190.

·
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 163 Sac. Ave., Gallipolis.
&amp;14·446· 7833 or 614. 446
1833.
.

1982 Toyota station wagon.
PS, P8, auto, 1110 cond,
t3 400 00 304 886
3422. .
.
•
•

NUCL-EAR

NOT IF, I WAS
PRESIDEN1"!

.

87

1--------

DO YOU '(HINI&lt;.
WE: COULD
EV~HAVEA

Po moray . 61 4-992 ·389 1 . ·· ,.

614· 367-7750.

lyzed to Hlustrate why na·
tlons go to war. 150 min.(
(jj) Nowswllch
• Odd Couple
IH801 Hitchhiker: The
Klllar A family mansion 1&gt;1&gt;comes a horror chambet for
a beautiful young invelid.
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Tho Bar·
dol"
10:20 CIJ MOVIE: 'Pillow Talk'
10:30 (JJ Celebrity Chell
(!l Fnhlon Action R-'
(jj) Hou11 for All s - o
• lndopenchrnt N (H80) Not Necolllrfly the
News Thia comedy oarits

SNAKE!!

Haul limeato~A, 1 and. gra ·
vll,dlr~ , bulk or bag fertilizer
and ltme .. E•cel slor Salt
Worlcslnc . 638 E. Main St

Fun olzo top tor ,1918 CJ7
jeep, good cond. Will 1111 or
trodo olant back top for CJ6
loop. 304·675-4096.

\•

(CC) Spenser is asked to
protect a beautdul exespionage agent . (60 min.l
Cil W•: A Commentary by
Gwynne Dyar: Goodbye
Wor (CC) The causes and
c;onsequencea of .the last

1130. Reasonable rates.

•tc-

••

Upholstery

presents sketches,

PEANUTS

Up holate ry

XI I Jr I I )"
(Answers tomorrow

Yesterday's! Jumbleo: RUSTY SWASH AVENUE LEDGER
Answer. A. political platform Is !lomething a
candidate needs when he hasn't this-

A LEG TO STAND ON

·-

James Jacoby

So~.:~th

missed
his chance

'IAQJ4

By Jomeo Jacoby

+QJ 71

NORTH
• 92
• 982

"

EAST
Atlanta bridge professional Jim WEST
+J 10 ~ H
Kerkorian was on opening lead with' : ~;:
'I K 7
the West cards of today's deal. 11
J 10 &amp; 3
t K7
seemed strange to him that South, who
652
+A 109"3
could not act over one spade, could·
SOUTH
suddenly jump to four hearts when his
+AQ8
partner, who had passed originally,
.,
10 8 63
made a belated takeout double. He de-1
t
AQ64
cided that South's aggressive bid was·.,
+KB
based on strength In spades and thai
Vulnerable: Both
leading a spade would only help dej .
Dealer: West
clarer. So be led the two of hearts. ·
That worked. Declarer ducked in :
Nort• Eut
Soot•
dummy, and East won the king. East W•ot
Pass
I+
Paso
now returned the king of diamonds1' Pass
Db I.
Pass
4t
Declarer won, drew a round of hearts,. ~!:!
Pass
Pass
and played the club king. East won the
ace and played another diamond. Lat-.
Opening lead: • 2
er, when South tried the spade finesse;
West took the spade king and cashed ~---------_J
the setting diamond trick.
,
Even though Kerkorlan's thinking
was top-level, declarer should still
have prevailed against the trump lead.
After winning tbe diamond ace, he South's queen will Jose to West's king
should have played a heart to dummy but later declarer can finesse again tO
and then led the spade nine. If East his. eight. He will thus establish a
does not cover, he lets it ride. If East spade, on which he can jettison a small'
does cover the nine with t~e 10 or jack, diamond from dummy.

+
+

TWENT~· TWO?

SORR\', MAAM ..

SI)(T't'-THREE ?

BOOK HAS A
CAP!

News
CD Man from U.N.C.l.E
(!l NFL'o Gr..- Mo·
menta: Football Folllao
Cil Tony Brown'• Journal

CHILD-~E515TANT

Tonv Brown discusses is·

sues of special Interest to
the black community.
ill) Shielding Amorlce: Can
Star w.. Mallo Us Safe

•

.

,.
i'

~16trf
lay THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

41 English
river
1 Example
42 Greek youth
5 Summer
refuge
g()!ldess
~~&amp;
9 Asseverale ·43 Impala, e.g.
10 Opposite
DOWN
I Billiard shot ·
11 Split
12 SlurTed
2 Spanish
over
province
14 Stadium
3 N.Y.C.
shout
garment
YHterday'o Anawer
111 Gold (Sp.)
area
16 O'Neill
4 Before
play
G Panama 13 Inhibit
28 Varnish
17 "A - for All seaport 111 Seraglio
ingredie nt
chamber 30 Mountain
Seasons"
6 Muslim
name ' 21 FeU;
crest
18 Rickles
or Adams
7 N.Y.C.
chop
32 Revolt
19 Perched
ad haven 22 Aries sign 33 Candle
20 In compari· 8 Church 23 Book
38 Medil.
dignitary
of maps
fortress
son with
22 Surf sound 10 Evita's 2&amp; Hold dear
(abbr.)
23 Yearn for
husband 27 Worship
39 Turf
25 City of
.-..-..--..Manasseh
26 Defrost
27Her name
means

wgracious"

29 Bulgarian

coin
300klahoma
city
31 Tub
34 "Bells Ringing"

35 Actress
Patricia
36 Memorable
period
37 Sinatra
is one
39Cut
40 Furniture
set
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

"

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
· aposlrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CIYPTOQUOTE
11-12
OFC

GV

YGPPA

GO ~' C WI

Zl

and film footage satirizing

City. Oh. Cell 61 4·26 6 .
1470. cell e••. 61 4·4463438 . Ol d &amp; new
Uphootorod.
304-675-5472 .

news

current events.
1 1 :00 • (l) (J) (I). CIJ Cilli Gil

I THINK MV MAT~

R &amp; M Furniture Manufacturing. St. Rt. 7. Crown

Ferguaon'a

II

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answet', aa suggested by the above cartoon.

launched a drive to teve the
Iivas seven million children a
year who die from curable

4 W.O.

82

a

who are trying to close

ALLEYOOP

675-4322.

1 978 Ford 8uotlebock
campor van. 4&amp;.000 miiH,

p1, pb, auto. elr, •m·tm

Flm quolity mixed hoy. 1970 Cutlaoo Sporto Coupe.
Lorge boleo. Coli 614·949· Now point job. Coli &amp;14·
3069 oft. 4 p.m..
·
667 -6251 or 61 4-992·
5864.
Goodhay, S1 .00ondl1 .&amp;0 1 - - - - - - - - par bole, Redmond Ridge, 1983 Dodge Chorgor
304•676-5604.
Shelby, bluo oilvor. 5 epaod.
AC, AM·FM otorop, 29,000
mlloo. 111. 200.00. 304·
882-228&amp;
.
Transpnrlallllll
1983 Ford Falrmoqt, 4 dr.

Nevada.

576·2644.

-;:;=::;::======

1984 MercuryTopaz. 4 dr..

7:05 CIJ Mary Tytar Moore
7:30 II Ill New Newlywed
Game
(JJ Please Don't Eat Dotsleo
.
(!l Action Sparta of the
80's: Off Road Recing
Frontier 500 ·Off Road Race
from las Vegas to Reno,

Starks Tree and Lawn ·Ser·

Reoidentlol Windows &amp;
Awning, 20 Pet. off on
in1uleted replacement win- •
dow, vinyl and steel tiding ... ·.;··

1979 dodge 4 WD. 'li ton
PU. good cond. Coli 614·
44&amp;·2323.

11 -/a.

AN IMF"Aiii!NT
"~IVEif WHO
HA!J TO eTOf" FO~
A iiii:AFFIC L.16HT
U5UA~~y C'0!5 THI5,

Prlntanawerttere: "(

•J•IIenon•

19n FO&lt;d 302 automatic,

8o

r

JI

MacNeil-Lehrer
Newohour
• 1D1 Divorce Court

work, 304-676-2295 .

Van1

ITfU~1RLr.J
tDEXOUSj

ill)

1400.00. 304·676-31 90.

304-1175·4210 titer 6:00
PM .

II K II

a CIJ Wheel of Fortune
C1J SCTV Network
lEi Eyewltneaa Newo

_____ ,.,

1$60 Ford dump truck, w~h
4 - d tran~mloolon ond 2

"' !.~
...:--

(I)

1978 Chevy 4 WD . FW8.
Mony extroo. New dreo ond 83
Excavating
ohocko. body good . Excel·
1982 Chovotte 43,000 lent running cond. Coll614miiOI,PS,PB.AM-FMrodlo, · 948 308711 5
Good-1 Excavating, baseR
•
t. p.m.
men~•· footers. driveways,
WD, sir, 4 dr., 4 cyi., outo,
gray color. See ot 642 Filth -:
septiC tanks, landscaping.
Avo .. Gollipollo. Coli 1114· 74 Mqtorcvcles
Cell anytime 614 - 446 ·
, 4_4_6_·_16_0_7_._ _ _
. __
4637, Jamasl. Davison, Jr.
owner.
,.
1969 CorvoHo. 350 4opd .. 1982 Kewukl street bike,
air, t·!Dp, PS. P8. PW. $600, uc. cond. Coli &amp;14· Do1er Work land c;learing
AM·FM radio, radiol dr11. 441-3684.
landscaping. etc. Free esti:
uc. CCll)d .. *7,1100. Coil
motes. Cell 614-446· 8038.
614· 379·2433.
11 ft . 8011 boat, 50 HP, or 614-992 -7119 anytime.

radio, front whl. dr. White
Mixed greoo hoy for sole. with grey Int. U760. &amp;1 4·
Coli 614· 949·2~37 .
949-2894.

1979 Rabbit. 197&amp; Ford
LTD. Call alter &amp;PM. 614·
388·B823.

lon.

1984 Dodgo pick-up. Stant Tree trimming and removal.
aix. 4 apeed overdrive, ex- ln1ured , free estimates.
traa. *7000. or boot offer: reasonable rates, 304-676·
7121 .
Ctll614· 742-2788.

•

Autos for Sale

An interview with Matt Dil-

removal. Coli 304· 675·
1331.

cruloo, AM· M tope. olectric 304-89&amp;-3802
windowo and door Iacko.
bod llnor, Y-8. aux . gao tank. Fred's Bldg. end Remodel·
now 118.000 eo king ing, baaaments, porches.
111,800. Call 814· 446· roofing, ·aiding, painting,
· leveling trailers, aatisfation
9364.
gueronteed. 304 · 773·
1974 Suburbon high mi· 9116 .
le~e. rNery option, good
cond. runo exc. Coli 614· B. &amp; D. Home Improve·
menta, vinyl aiding, alumn
21&amp;·1t28.

1982 Sllvar Camaro, om-fm
8· trock. outo. trano.. AC.
new tireo. 1&amp;800. Coi1614441·37118 after 4pm.

Horoe omoll very gentle boy Chryoler 1984 Filth Avenue.
color. Call614-246-5149 . Luxury packoga. oil options,
boige, low mlleo. *11.1100.
Anguo bull 4 yeoro old. v~ry Coli 614-268-1379 otter
gentle. Cetlll14·245·91 43 8PM .
oltor &amp;.
1986 Pontile Fiero loadod,
7 yr. 'old App. galding. under werr1nty. Muat sell.
exoolilnt riding horn. Coli Coli &amp;14 - 992·&amp;628
814·446· 7040 after 6, anytlmo .
614· 992-JOOB.
1976 Oldo. custom cruloor
FO&lt; Sole:Htrtford bull. Cell S.W. Loaded. GC .. good
614-949-2368.
tlroo, 111 oervlco recordil. •
11800. Aloo a 1tn FO&lt;d
Grenado Ghla. 2 dr .. good
64 Hay 8o Grain
tiroo, FC. 11350. 814·892·
6361 .

71
66 Building Supplies

72

73_.

Soiling ftmily olcknuo. Rog. ,1 982 Chevy Chavetto 4 dr.,
Ouortor horoe gentle • Poll- auto .. air. 49.700 miloo.
moo more foiled Moy 88 t2.300. Call 614-379·
S260. Coll614'·379-2144 . 2682.

Hoy for oale. Coli 614-3792424 .

Fatty Tree Trimming. atump

perienced carpenter, alectri·
cian, meson, painter, roof· ·

1978 Oodge Aopen, PS, PB,
AC, now radlail. AM-FM.
llereo, low mllaage . Body •
englno perfect . Locolly
owned . Mull oall. Coll61 4·
446-0941.

19n Font Granado. 302
engine,
V-8. outomotic. Coil
ricane. WY. 304·757 -11&amp;44 614·388-8629
alter 5pm.
.. 757-6399.
1983 Dodge Chorger,
New Holland 354 grlndor 46,000 mlleo. good cond ..
mixer. Used very little. E~c *3100. Coli 814 · 266·
cond , 304-273-4215.
1768.

63

Codlllaco, Mercedeo ,
Porche, etc. direct from
Government.-. Seized In drug
roido. Available your ores.
Savo *thouoondsl . 2164&amp;3·3000, ext. A3044.

new pllnt. new camper top.

Bena Liveltock Trallera. Hur-

Alllo Chelmoro 7030 dieoal
form !rector, 130 hp, good
cond. *7.000.00. Sldero
Equipment, Hondoroon, W.
Yo . 304-676 -7421 .
E 1p
fo G
qu mont r ravelyTroc·
tor. Rotary plow, 5 point
cultivator, Sulfty and reel
typo mower 30 Inch 0110
seoro automatic conoole
humidifier, phone 304-871·
4210.

Autos for Sale

1976 VW 811tle new tireo.
body good ohopo. Call 81 4·
446· 7879 oftor IPM.
·

automatic,

Whitt bd .room 1&lt;1ho. Inc.
46 SpliCe for Rent

Musical
I nltru menta

71

II C J

CIJ Doctor Who

Pump ula~. service. Regis·
tered in Ohio. All work

Autos for Sale

CIJ Andy Griffith

6:30 II(]) (I) NBC Nowo

J .and L. lnotallatlon . Roof·

71

lUI

Nome Thst
Tune
(!l Mazda SportaLook
CIJ 3·2·1 , ContaC1(CCl
® Eyilwitneos News
(j] ~lectrlc Company
• Dlffrent Stfolces
iMAX) MOVIE: 'Electric

B11ement Waterproofing.

Drogonwynd Cattery Ktn·
nel. CFA Hlmaiayon. Poroian
ond Siameoa kltteno. AKC
Chow puppleo. Coli 448·
3844 alter ?PM .

(J) •

CJJ $100,000

Coli collect 1 -61 4·237·
0488, day or night. Rogero

Brlorpatch Konnolo All·
br11d grooming. Gordon
Setter female obedl..,ce
trained. Englloh CockorSpanlelo. 388-9790.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Television
Viewing

SHAKY WAS -QUIVER'S
UNCLII- AND I=LA'1TOP

Bloclt, ... brick, mo.rtar Jnd

We:rm Morning WOod burner

to town . 2 bdr., fireplace,
full bosemont. garage. 3

DICK TRACY-

Serv1ces

81

Pomeroy..:..Middleport, Ohio

r

'

•

CECW
OG

BGI 0

OFGI C

J C PE C I

MFG
BGI O

WZTZKQPGQI
HW C

OF C D ·

Y G GPZIF .

UGPTIBZOF
CI')'Jitoqllote: TIIERE'S NO'l'HING SO
COMFORTABLE AS A SMAIL BANKROLL. A BIG ONE IS
ALWAYS IN DANGER. - WILSON MIZNER

-

r ..te'*1'•

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel •

r---

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

T"'sday, November 12, 1986

Local briefs:-__, I Area death .,. $13,000 raised for liver transpl~t ·

Meigs EMS answers four calls

Joseph F. Varian

Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports four calls
Monday; Racine at 1:31 a.m. to R,lver Heights Apartments for
Carolyn Russell to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:08
a.m. treated but did not transport David Reed; Racine at 12: 11 p.m.
went to Apple Grove for James PeiUgrlno to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 4:10 p.m. took Came Osborne to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Joseph E. Varian, 37, of Mason,
W.Va., died Monday !rem a
self.lnfllcted gunshot wound.
Hew as born Sept. 5,19481nMason
to the Ia~ Rose F. DUis.
He worl\ed In the maintenance
department at the Foote Mineral
Company of New Haven, W.Va.,
and was a member of the United
SteelworkersofAmerlcaLocat5171.
Sulvlvlng are his wife, Bonnie I.
Varian: one daughter, Tammy S.
Varian and one son, Brian E.
Varian, both at home.
The body wUI be cremated.
Foglesong Funeral Horne Is In
charge or arrangements.

Special speakers scheduled
Major and Mrs. Levi Olmstead (retired), of Marietta, wtll be guest
speakers durtng Thursday 7 p.m. services at The Salvation Army,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. The Olrnsteads were former corps
oftlcers In Meigs and Athens Counties about 35 years ago. Special
music wtll be featured . The public Is Invited.

'War Cry' being distributed
The Salvation Army's Christmas War Cry Is being dtstrtbuted In
Middleport this week and next week. The week d Nov. 25, It wUI be
distrtbuted In Pomeroy. Anyone who Is missed and would like a copy
may caU 992-5472 or 992·748&gt;.

Supreme Court agfees
to hear bookstore case
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Supreme Court, entering a battle
over application of the First
Amendment,agreedtodaytodectde
If New York offlclats can shut down
a bookstore where prostitu tlon and
other sexual acts occurred.
The justices wUI hear arguments
this term In New York's appeal of a
lower court ruUngthat said the right
to free speech protects bookstores
from penalties that might be
Imposed on other businesses that
violate public nuisance law.
The New York State Court of
Appeals ruled In June that a
mandatory one-year closure of the
The VUlage Books and News In
Kerunore would be an "unconstltu·
tlonal restraint" on the store's First
Amendment rights.
"WhUe closure might be the most
efficient rell)edy, considerations of
thiS sort do not empower a state to
abridge frEedom of speech," the
state court said.
The district attorney's office fUed
a complaint against the store
following an Investigation In September 1982, when Erie County
oftlcla!S discovered that bookstore

premises were used for "UUclt
conduct" and sexual activity by
, patrons. The store seUs mostly
books d a sexual nature.
The state public health and
nuisance law requires t)le one- year
closure of "a nu!Siifiee," where
prostitution, lewdness and §lmllar
activities take place.
But the appeals court said the Ia w
co~ld not be applied to a bookstore as
long as less restrictive means, such
as an Injunction, could be used to put
an end to the IUE!f!al activities.
In Its appeal to the hlghcourt, New
York said the state appeals court
ruUng "risks a perversion of the
First Amendment whell.'by the
might ri the law becomes the shield
of the lawless."
"One need be no visionary to
recognize that the magazine rack In
the doorway ria brothel may well he
marketed as an Insurance policy
against court ordered closure," the
appeal said.
Lawyers (or the bookstore said
the lower court ruUng merely
"applied the well settled principle
thatwherealessDraconlanremedy
may abate the nuisance alleged by
(the state) It must be attempted."

Clinic wants authority
to dispense birth
control devices
CLEVELAND - Adrnlntstratoril
at a Cleveland high school cllnlc are
seeking authority fr&lt;llll school
officials to dispense birth control
devices.
East High School's clinic offers
sex counseling and pregnancy
testing, but Is prohibited from
dispensing condoms, diaphragms,
birth control p I I I s and other
contraceptives. ·
Clinic officials had previously
asked the Board of Education for
permission to dispense birth control
deviceS, butweretumed down.
"I'm expecting some fireworks,"
said Mary Butcher, chairwoman d
the Cleveland Student Health Program, which operates the ctlnlc.
The student health program Is a
ron-profit COillOrallon governed by
a board of trustees from some 20
social and medical agencies. It has
four full·dme staff members and

Weather forecast
Today - Showers and thunder·
storms Ibis morning then diminiSh·
tng this afternoon. High near 65.
Southerly winds 10 to 15 mph.
TonJihi-Cioudywlthachanceof
showers. Low 50to55.Southwlnds10
to15mph.
Wednesday - Variable cloudl·
ness and warm with a slight chance
of showers. High 70 to 75.
.
Chance ofraln-lllpercent today,
40 percent tonight and ll percent
Wednesday.
Exlended forecast for 'Thunday
through Salunlay - A chance of
rain Thursday and Friday, falr
Saturday. Highs In theupper50sand
60s Thursday, In the 50s to l.ow 60s
Friday and In the upper 40s to mid
50s Saturday. Lows In the40s to low
50s Thursday, In the upper 30s and
40s Friday and In the 30s Saturday.

Lottery winners
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Mon·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number- 829.
Ticket sales totaled $1,176,885,
with a payoff due of $459,032.
PJCK-4 -'llnl.
PICK-4 · ticket sales totaled
$177,n&gt;'i, with a payoff dueof$'19,755.
PICK4$1stralght bet pays$6,924.
PICK-I $1 box bet pays$577.

volunteer physicians wbo rotate
treating East High students at the
clinic.
The rllnlc's contract Is up for
school board renewal this month.
One of the clinic's strongest
supporters on the board, Alva T.
Banda, did not run for re- election
this year, but said he would lobby
hard to keep the clinic.
Booda predicts the new board wlll
eventually allow the clinic to he
Involved with birth control.
"The new board, I think, will be
more'itberal," he said. "There are
more younger people.''
Most board members favor the
clinic but some have reservations
about dispensing blrlh control
deviceS. ''That's a medical prolr
lem," said board member Stanley
Toutver. ''We're In education."
Parents must sign consent forms
permitting their chUdren to use the
clinic. Thelncreaselnslgned forms,
from 378Iast spring to about 9Xl so
far this year, has convinced cllnlc
workers that parental support Is
growing.
And the students speak favorably
otthe cllnlc.
"It's a good Idea," said smlor
Sherine Coster. "I don't have sex,
but almost all of my friends do.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorlal Hospital
Nov.ll
Adml88lons - Brulah Collier,
Dexter; Jeanette Hudson, Syra·
cuse; James Pelltgrlno, Racine; ·
Ethel Clark, Albany; Carrie Osborne, Reedsville; Paul Michael,
Pomeroy.
Discharges - Gina PeiUgrlno,
Marjorie MUboan, Jennifer Barrett.

Airlines offering
cheap holiday fares
By United PMS Intematkmal
Delta, American and United
airlineS are offering travelers
one-way fares thatwtuallowthem to
travel as cheaply as $29 during the
Thanksgiving holidays.
"It wUI help stimulate traffic
durtng a traditionally. slow travel
period," Mike W. Gunn,Amertcan's
vice president for marketing, said
Monday.
American will reduce one- way
tickets for nights of 500 mUes or less
to$29, for travel between cltles501 to
1,500 mUes apart. Tickets w1ll.cost
$49 and $79 for anything over 1,500
mues.
American travelers must leaveon
Thursday, Thanksgiving Day, or
Frtday and return by noon Satur·
day. Tlcketsmustbepurchasedona
roundtrtp·basls.
United Airlines, the nation's
largest alr carrter, said It would
match Amertcan fares on compel·
lngroutes, whichaccountsforabout
two-tblrds ofUnlted'strafflc. United
also said It was studying Delta's
boUday fare offerings, a spokesman
said Monday.
Delta says It wUI sell all coach
seats at flights to 100 U.S. cities at a
'lO percent discount from Its regular
fare on Nov. 28-:Jland Dec..:a&gt;-28. For
example, the Atlanta-to- Chicago
flight currently Is $250 and wlll cost
ooly $75durtng the diScount pertod.

wtll have to do It (the transplant),"
she said.
When she would be able to have
the transplant depends on several
factors: lndudlng tlndlng a donor .
liver and getting her weight up. She·
now weighs about 11 pounds, 11
ounces and must get to at leastl2
pounds, Shriver said.
The LoCocos, who are In their
mld-2Jls, used to 'live In Benwood,
W.Va., and both had worked at a
supermarket. But Mrs. LoCoco,
who took. a maternity leave, has
been unable. to go back and her
husband has been laid off since
about the time Stevie Lynn was
born.
"They lost their house and lost
their car (In Benwood)," Shriver
said, adding they managed to find a
subsidized rent apartment· In
Bellaire.

Inside:

"I think they are ooldlnguptairly
well - a lot better than I would,
really," Shriver said.
A fundra!Ser Is set for Sunday at
the National Guard Armory In
MoundsvUle, W.Va. Alot of help has
come from Inmates at the West
Virginia Penitentiary In MoundS·
ville, Shriver said.
"They. gave us a figured a little
over s:m," she said. "They (the
Inmates) are not telling us every·
thing they are doing. They're
keeping tt a secret. But we do lmow
they are working on a lot of things to
auction off. All of the money wiU go
for Stevie."
Among the arts and craft Items
tbe Inmates are . expected to
contribute Is an otlpalntlngofStevle
Lynn. Donations also are being
collected at the Bank of McMech~
(W.Va.).

By the Bend .......... Page 6, 7,
Classlfleds ....... Pages 8, 9, 10 .
Comics-TV ............. Page 11
Deaths ................... Page 12
Editorial ................. Page 2
Sports .............. Pages 3, 4, 8

e
Vol.35.

No.147
Copyrighted t 986

You, Vote of Conflden~e
I1 App,e~lated

NATHAN BIGGS

UA W to vote on new
contract at GOC
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) -United
Auto Workers at General Dynamic
Corp. plants could be backonthejob
tonight making tanks - If they
ratify a proposed 31·month
agreement.
The bargaining counctl Monday
voted 104 to accept the contract tha t
carrtes the agreement that no
workers will be fired or disciplined
from acts of alleged misconduct
durtng the two-month·old walkout
against the nation's leading defense
contractor.

REMEMBJR THEM
WITH

•••
AND HALLMARK
CHRISTMAS CARDS!

r---------===-1

at y

•

enttne
2 Soclions. 12 Pages
25 Cenu
A Multimedia Inc. Nawopop.,.

·Propose toll free-telephone
service to Mason-New Haven

Prosecution resumes
summations in court martial
ByDANIELDROSDOFF
from the armed forces and lose their sought for ex·army commander
UP! Senior Editor
pension lights, a mUltary spokes· Galtlerl, 59, who held the dual
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina man said. Today's summations positions ot president and army
(UPI) - Military prosecutors were to be followed Immediately by commander when he ordered the
launched their final summation the presentation of a two·week AprU 2, 1982, Invasion of the
today In the secret court· martial of defense.
windswept South Atlantic Islands.
The stiffest penalty, l2 years, was
16 officers accused of recklessness
and negligence In the 74-day war , - - - - - - - - - - - . , - - - - - - - - - - with Britain over the disputed
Falkland Islands.
Prison sentences of eight to 12
years were sought Moooay for
members of the three- member
mUltary junta, Including former
President Leopolda Galtlerl, who
launched the IU· fated Falkland
Invasion In 1982.
Prosecutors also aslifd' for a
10-year sentence for former navy
commander Jorge Anaya and an
eight-year sentence for ex·atrforce
'
commander BasUto Lamt Dozo.
A three-year sentence was requested for retired VIce Adm. Juan
'
Jose Lombardo, ex-chief of South
Atlantic operations, but prosecutors
asked that charges be dropped
against retired VIce Adm. Leopolda
Suarez del Cerro and retired Gen.
Osvaldo J. Garcia.
"The defendants have been
charged with negligence and recklessness," said Lt. Col. Edgardo
Semberolz, secretary to the Su·
preme Military Tribunal, ' which
Paid for by Nathan Biggs
began the judicial process In 1983.
It cqnvlcted, the defendants would
also be dishonorably discharged

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 13, 1985

Asuggestion to petition the Public
UtUltles Commission of Ohio for toll
free telephone service to the
Mason-New Haven areas was made
at Tuesday's meeting of the
Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce.
MaklngthesuggestlonwasPome·
roy businessman B111 Francis.
Francis reported he and BUI
HaptonstaU, another local business·
man, had been In contact with BUI
Blower, of the Middleport Chamber,
and with a New Haven business·
man, and bot~ were receptive to the
tdea of toll·free service.
Members of Pomeroy Chamber
who were present for the meeting
sam they felt that toll-free service
would be beneficial If It could he
arranged.
Francis said hewouldcheck to see
what preliminary steps are needed

THANK YOU
FOR ELECTING ME·
SALISBURY
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

Lewis undergoes
abdominal surgery
MEMPHIS, Tenn (UP!) -Jerry
Lee LewiS underwent surgery today
to correct a bleeding ulcer and
famUy members said there Is only a
50-00 chance the .Piano-pounding
rock 'n roller will survive his latest
bout of stomach trouble.
Carl Perkins, a longtime friend
and1950srock 'n' roll colleague, said
Lewis was In good condition as he
was about to enter the operation
room, whicl} began on schedule at
8:30a.m. EST.
"He was sharp. ·He lml'W everybody. He said, 'Hey, Carl, what are
you doing here?' He's one of them
tough rockablllles," Perkins said.
''He lx!unces back.''
Doctors told Lewis' famUy Man·
day that the controversial enter·
talner had a 50 percent of. chance of
surviving his most recent bout of
stomach trouble, said Bob
McCarver, thefatheroi.Lewls'wlfe,
·
Kerrie Lewis.
"It definitely does not look good,"
he said.
Lewis was admitted to Methodist
HospltallastFrldaywlthabdomlnal
pains, McCarver said, and doctors
found a bleeding ulcer.

BEllAIRE, Ohio (UPI) -So tar
$13,tnl has been raised for the
$115,1))) Uver transplant operation
neededbyStevleLynnLoCoco,a3%
month old daughter of an unem·
played couple.
Stevie Lynn has biliary atresia, a
congenital disease that causes the
ducts In the liver toelthernotform at
all or to form unproperly. ChriS
Shriver, a famUy .friend and
fund· raiSer organizer, said Monday
the girl Is "doing pretty good"
considering she has had !1W
operations already to keep her alive.
"She's stable at home but they
said her condition could change at
any moment," Shrtver said.
Next Monday, offtctals at Cblld·
ren's Hospital In Pittsburgh wtll
check het to see If her liver Is
deteriorating, Shriver said.
"They want to see bow fast the
cirrhosis Is setting In as to when they

LEriER FROM 1891- A letter i? the editor rl the GallipoliS Tribune
was Included In a tbne capsule encased tn lhe cornerstone of the
recently demollsbed "BuDding C" at GalllpoUs Developmental Center.
The capsule was placed In the sandstooe block Nov. 12, 1891.
Representatives of the GaWa County Historical SOciety along with the
Gallla Academy student who discovered the box's exlstance, Charles
Brown, opened tbe capsule during a ceremony Tuesday .Here, Brown's
lnsiructor John Lester and Ruth Tapp of the Historical Society examine
tbe 94-year-old letter. (Photo by Lee Ann Welch)

New store to
--in·-·Poineroy

open
•

Ttlere's a new store In Meigs
County. It's the Big Wheel discount
department store and It Is scheduled
to open at 9 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 23,
at 4Lm Laurel Cliff Road,
Pomeroy.
The first Fisher's clolhing store
was opened In New Castle, Pa., In
1914 by Mike, Dan and Ed Fisher.
From that beginning developed
today'~ chain of 78 discount department stores In seven states. The
Pomeroy store becomes the 31st
store to open In Ohio. ·
The Big Wheel has undergone
many changes over the years.
Stores have been expanded from

8,000squarefeet to45,000squarefeet
and now feature carpeted fashion
departments,exctt lng new concepts
in housewares, domestics and
electronics, and fashions for the
entire famUy. In addition, customers c~n shop for all their health
andbeauty,sportlnggoods.automo·
tlve, paint and hardware needs.
ManagerTlmCustersaidtheBlg
Wheel offersquallty merchandise at
discount prices, as well as a blight,
clean shopping atmosphere with
liberal exchange anct'refund poUcles
and convenient layaway. Big Wheel
accepts cash, personal checks, and
Visa and Master Card credit cards.

to secure extended service from the
In recent years, the Pomeroy
three telephone companies which plant, which Is Midwest Steel's only
would he Involved - West VIrginia manufacturing plant, has had many
Telephone, C&amp;P and General Tele· layoffs. however, said Serey, a few
phone of Ohio.
employees have been called hack
Speakers for the November this past 'year. The firm now
chamber meeting were Tom Serey, employs about 30 in Pomeroy.
of Midwest Steel, and John Rose, of
Although Midwest does not sell
Ohio University's Office of Confer- products locally, Serey said the
ences and Workshops.
company makes Its own purchases
Serey gave a brief history of locally whenever possible.
Midwest Steel. which began In
Chamber members also viewed a
Pomeroy In the early 1900's to slide presentation which was premanufacture light track work . pared by Midwest Steel for a recent
articles which were sold mainly to trade show in Houston. Texas.
coal mining operations.
Midwest has offices In Houston,
Over the years, the company has Charleston, W.Va., Detroll, Mich.,
moved Into heavier track work Granite City and Chicago, Ill.
which Is now exported Internatlon·
Rose lnfortneQ.•.the group of an
ally as well as domestically.
upcoming telecommunications con·
Durtng the best of times, Midwest terence at Ohio University which Is
has had as many as 89 employees In designed to educate small bus!·
the Pomeroy works.
nesses about inexpensive legal

prot-edures. The conferenC&lt;' is
scheduled for February 26 and
registration is $50.
In other matters, Ron Ash,
chamher president. reported that
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge wUI
definitely not he closed for repairs
before Christmas. Ash had been In
conl;lct with George Dugan, of the
Ohio Department of Transporta·
lion's Marietta office.
Ash also reminded chamber that
potential members of the board of
directors would be voted on at the
December meeting.
Ash mmmended those Involved In
this year 's chamber sponsored
community Halloween party. In
charge of the party was Tom Reed.
He was assisted by Sherrt Hart,
chamber secretary, and Blll Nease,
Paul Simon and Joe Clark,
members.
·

Chambers make initial Christmas plans
Both Middleport and Pomeroy
Chambers of Commerce began
Tuesday to make plans for this
year's Christmas celebrations.
Middleport Chamber, meeting In
regular session at the LaSaUe
Restaurant, voted to have their
parade on Monday, December2,at 6
p.m.
Middleport lsalsomaklngplans to
Install mlnl·ChrlstmasJtghts on the
trees which border the sidewalks of
the business section of the vlllage.
Each b!Jslness In the vUiage wlll be
encouraged to pucha~ lights for the
tree outside their establishment.
Chamber wlll then try to pick up the
costs for any trees left undecorated.

Middleport Chamber also plans to lng until 8 p.m. for Christmas
have a Chrlsimas party for shopping on December 16. Clark
chamher members and employees said the merchannt's association
to be held at the LaSalle, Monday,
December 23, following regular
business hours.
A residential ChriStmas lighting
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Former
program was discussed by chamber State Commerce Director Warren
but no deflnlte plans were made.
W. Tyler says he never communiPomeroy Chamber, meeting In cated, either verbally or In wrtttng.
regular .sesston at the·Ohio Power to Gov. Richard F: Celeste or his
buDding, has tentatively scheduled staff. a bout the problems hls agency
their parade for Saturday, No- was having regulating Home State
vember30.
Savings Bank.
Chamber member JoeClark, also
Tyler testified Tuesday beforP the
of the Bend Area Merchant's Joint Select Committee on Savings
Association, reported that stores In and Loans, a state Ieg1slatlvepanel,
Pomeroy wlll probably begin stay· and his answers were about the

would be announcing details of this
year's Christmas promotion In the
near future.

Never told Celeste - Tyle~
same as they had been0ct .l6, when
he last faced the committee.
Meanwhile, the committee pro&lt;l.Uced.a.Nov, 7, ~. ~ranQI•m
from former state savings and loan
superintendent C. LawrPnce H•ddleston. telling Joseph J. Sommer.
chief of staff In the governor's office,
that internal · matters within the
division had become "a powder
keg."

House, senate start on final sessions
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ·- A list
of b!Us that aroused little controversy were voted out of the state
Senate and House Tuesday during
the first sessions In either chamber
since early summer.
A blll authorizing the director of
the Ohio Depariment of Natural

Resources l.o accept bids for
construction of state park facilities
passed the House unanimously.
State Rep. Ross Boggs, D·
Andover, said a private company
~an bid on construction of facUlties such as marinas, concession stands
and
. under thejll"(l~~·

SENIOR GRIDDERS HONORED - Senior members of Eastern's
varsity football team were honored Tuesday at the annual Fall Sports
hBllquet were, first row, left to right- Don Maxson, manager; Kev.,

r-----------------------1
Use this handy checklist while shopping
for family and friends -

C &amp; D PENNZOIL

JUDY WILLIAMS
lluto·owners innovative approach to life insurance is
another reason why one name
says it best.
Like our new Perma Term®2
Program which insures all
family members in one low·
cost, totally flexible policy.
Before purchasing life in·
surance, do yourself afavor by
comparing it to penna Term 2
from Aulo · Owner~ ...,..::::=-.....

FIVE POINTS RD., POMEROY, OH.

We now have Ice Cold Beer for CarryOut. Lowest Legal Prices in Ohio.

THIS WEfK'S POP SPfCIAl

PEPSI-COLA •••• 8 ,:n~~· $179
SORRY .... NO BEER SALES ON SUNDAY
WIC and FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED

Stop and Register For FREE TURKEY To Ba Givan
Away November 26- No purcheae neceuary.
Need not be preaent to win.

214 EAST MAIN

OPEN Mon. thN Thura: 8:30a.m. 'til 9:30 p.m.
Fri. &amp; Sat. 'til 11 p.m.; Sunday 8:30 'til 8:00 p.m.

Auto-Owners Insurance

POMEROY
992-6687
Life. Horne. Car. Business.
One name
II all.

'I

0
0
0
0
0
0

Columbia Gas announces
rate reductio~
.·

Parents
Husband/Wife
Children
Brothers/Sisters
Aunts/Uncles

Columbia of Ohio Is again
reducing rates to Its customers. The
decrease wUI be nearly$2Jlayearto
the average customer.
Jake M. Koebel, Columbia man·
ager of the Gallla·Melgs Division,
said, "We are pleased to announce
this seventh C\)nsecutlvedecrease In
gas costs as the heating season Is

Nieces/Nephews

D Grandparents/Grandchildren
0 Letter Carrier

IE SURE TO SEE, TOO, OUR
FINE SELECnON Of HAUMARII
BOXED CHRISTMAS CARDS. "

POMEROY

beginning. Gas costs - which
account for about three·quarters of
the customer's bitt - are more than
15 percent lower than they were 18
months ago."
The reduction wUI beeffectivewlll
bills mailed after December 10. It
will benefit ail customers, Including

those on Columbia's budget plan,
whose monthly payments will be
lowered.
The decrease amounts to about 16
cents per l,IXMJ cubic feet of gas used.
"This refiectsourdlllgent ongoing
efforts too obtain the least cost gas
tor our customers and to hold
opera ling costs as low as possible,"

Koebel said. "We are confident the
moderating lrt•nd in gas costs Will
continue."
"Columbia will conlln~e to usc
every possible means to pmvlde I he
best possible srrvtce at the least cost .
to our I mUllan customers In 57 of
Ohlo's 88 counties."

25
Job training sessions deadline November
.

0 Minister
D Neighbors and Friends

ELBERFELDS

Barton, Kevin Barber, Tim Dorst, John Rice. !War - Coach Ron HID,
Dave Edwards, Kevin Morn., Alan Reed, manager; Royoo BisseU,
Tone Chapman, Joe Ruayon, Ryan Bearhs, IUid Coach Don Eichinger.
· Absent - Bob Epling.

OUTSTANDING NE1'TERS "- Oul8tan. .g netten honored
Tuellday nllhl at lhe anaual EllS Fall Sports baquet were, 11nit row,
left to rf«hh - Beverb' Wlpl, best sermc percentage and Tonya
Savoy, IIJOIIt polnti scored. Rear - Marprd Homer, he8l spiking
percenla(e and Kri!tl Hawk, most bnproved and 111081 polnUI soored.

I

Area residents Interested In
attending area training Institutions
through the Job Training Partner·
ship Act (J'i'PA) during winter
sessions must submit applications
tor classroom training by Nov. 25.
Funding request forms are avail·
able at the Gallta·Melgs Commun·
lty Action Agency .offices at 659
Third Ave., Gallipolis, (446·1018)

and 117 West Second St., Pomeroy,
(992·2222) .
Before submitting an ap~llcation,
Individuals must be certified as
eligible for JTPA by the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services
(OBES) , which can be contacted at
446-1683 or 992-6671. ·
Assistance may be available for
training fai:lllttes such as Buckeve

Hills Career Center, Rio Grantlc
College and Commu~Ity College,
Hocking Technical College and
Tri·County JVS.
Prior to training. participant s
need to complete an extensive
vocational assessment whtchwtllhe
used in reviewing training options.
Potential applicants should contact
the training facilitY they are

·I

I

interested In attending to determine
class availability, entry require·
ment s and other financial aids
whl't11 may be available. JTPA
requires individuals seeking fund ·
lngl.to apply for any other grants
which may be available. Deadline
for the Ohio lnsl rucllonal Grant
(O!Gi Is Nov. 29.

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