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                  <text>Wednesday, January 15, 1986

'·

Actress Donna Reed, cancer victim
Elizabeth V. Roush

Philip Powell
Philip Powell, 70, died Tuesday at
his home on Coil' St. in Middleport.
A retired truck driver, he was
born at Chester on June 20, 1915. a
son of the late William J. and Annie
FJ ~erick Powell. He was a
veteran of World War II.
SuiViving are two sisters. Elizabeth Jeroleman, Puducah. Ky .. and
Mary Showalter of Pomeroy, and
several nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, he was
Preceded In death by five brothers.
Graveside seiVIces will~ held at
10 a.m. Thursday at the Chester
Cemetery with Rev. Herbert Grate
offlciaing. There is no visitation and
friends may give to the charity of
their choice rather than sending
flowers. The Ewing Funeral Home
is in c harge of arrangements.

Estill Moore
Estill Moore. Syracuse. was dead
upon arriva l at Veterans Memorial
Hospital Wednesday morning. The
body was taken to the Ewing
Fumeral Home which will be in
charge of arrangements.

Elizabeth V. Roush, 85, Route 2.
Racine. died Tuesday.

A housewife. she was born Feb. 2.
1900 at Pomeroy. a daughter of the
late James and Sarah Baremore
Cleland. She was a member of the
Letart United Methodist Church
and White Shrine.
Survlving are three daughters,
Kathryn Oliver, Ponnerov: Frances
Miller. Racine; DeloreS Zaborek,
Edgerton. Wise.: a son. Leonard
Roush, Hillsboro: a sister. Gladvs
Sar!lln, New Brighton, Pa.: ·a
son-In-law, Herbert L. Miller. Ra cine: a grandson. Franklin Le\\is
who made his home \\ith Mrs.
Roush, and his wife, Rita . numerous other grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents. she was
preceded in death by her husband,
Roy M. Roush. in June. 1!166. a
sister. three brothers and a
grandson.
Gravestde rites for the family
only will be held at 3 p.m. Thursday
at the Letart Falls Cennetery \\ith
Rev. Lee Miller atfirlating. There is
to be no visitation and the family
asks that flowers be omitted. The
Ewing Funeral Home Is in charge
of arranrements.

Four teachers attend
mock trial workshop
Meigs County Judge Robert
Buck, in an effonto help high school
students learn more about Ameri can's legal system. recently sponsored four Meigs County teachers·
attendance at the Ohio Mock Trial
Program's teacher-training work shop held in Columbus on Dec. 13.
Judge Buck sponsored Joseph
Bailey of Eastern High School.
Richard Chambers of Eastern
Local High School. Jim Oliphant of
Meigs High School. and Dana
Kessinger of Meigs Local through
his court's 510 funding.
ThP program, oow in its third
year. is jointlv sponsored bv the
Ohio. Stale Bar Association. An ·
thony J . Celebrezze. Jr . and the
American Civil Liberties UniOn of
Ohio Founda tion. ·.
Purpose of the program is to help
high school students understand
how the American legal system
works lhrugh participation in a

simulated trial.
The 1~ case involves a high
school newspaper' student editorial
board refusing to publish a paid
advertlsennent by another student
organization.
The organization. Youth for
Military Service, claims their F irst
Amendment rights. as guaranteed
by the Constitution, have been
violated.
The teacher -training workshop is
a pre-r&lt;quisite for participation in
the program. The worksoop included a prl'S&lt;'!ltation of facts and
legal issues in the case as well as a
discussion on courtroom procedures and rules of evidenCP.
Funds for the 1~ Ohio Mock
Trial Program were provided by
the OSBA. Attorney General An·
toony J. Celebrezze. Jr.. the
Goveroor' s Office at Criminal
J ustice Ser;ices and The Ohio
Humanities Council .

Mayors end cases
One defendant forfe ited bonds
and four others were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting $450 posted on a
charge of driving while intoxicated
and $50 posted on a chatgeof failure
to control a vehicle was Gregory
Todd .Johnson. Pomeroy .
Fined were Rick Harmon . Pomeroy . ~and costs and restitution on
a criminal mischief charge; Lar~·
Laudermilt . Rutland. $100 and
costs. driving while undf'r suspen·

slon. and S425 and thrE&gt;P da;·s in jail.
driving while intoxicated; Mike
Darst. Middleport. $100 and costs.
assault. and Roger Stewart . Middleport. $2i and costs. failure to
cont rol vehiClf'.

S&lt;:&gt;ven defendants were fined in
the cou11 of Pomero; Mayor
Richard Seyh Tuesda;· night.
They are Bria n 1\ . Swan. Pomeroy. faiiUI&gt;' to vield Ihe nght at wa\·.
$.JJ and costs: Brian K. Arms .
Minersvi lle. stop s i~'ll violation. $43
and costs; Tad Lockard. Wellston .
running r!'d light, $6:l and costs;
RJck\· McClellan. Pomerov. $313
and costs. disorder!)· conduct. and
$63 and costs. rrsisring

fHTf'S t ;

Raondl Eakins. Pomero; . failurc to
transfer vehicle. $6.1 and cost s:
opera ting a vehicle while under
suspension. $W and costs, and
driving "hile intoXIcated $J;o and

$58,218.75
collected in
court fines
Thirty-th rE'f' a nl'sts wprr mad r

In December b' the Middlepo11
Police Departmml. Chief Sid Li ttle
reports.
The department investigated 13
accidf'nl s and all vehicles were
driven 4.710 miles during the
month . Parking meter collections
totaled $1m and there were 557
parking meter tickets written.
Meanwhile. Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman collected $58.218.75
in fines and fet'S during 19ffi.
according to his annual report .
Variou s sources of the income
included: bonds forfeited, Sll.912;
fines, $11.13J: court costs, $5,800:
merchant pollee collections. $592:
trash haullngpennits. $100: demoU tlon pennits. $Jl; trailer permits,
$.ll; accident reports, $51; siding
permits, ~: roofing permtts, $45;
remodeling permits, S:!i; zoning
permits, $15: building permits.
$288.75; porch permits, $5; sidewalk permits, $Jl; pool permits,
$10: miscellaneous pennlts. $15,
and tax! license, $50.

cos ts: John R. Young. Pomeroy.
disorderly, $63 and costs. and
resisting arrest, $.'ll3 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were H. J .
Grim m, Middleport. $45; Lois
McClellan. $45; Darla Hawley ,
Pomeroy. S4i: George Oliver. Jr ..
Leon, W. Va .. $43: William Pethtel.
New Haven. W. Va .. $43; Joyce P ..
\' ance. Alban,·. $43; Kimberly A.
Nelson. Pomeroy. $57; James E.
Harmon. Dexter. $44 , all posted oo
speeding charges, and Betty L.
Young, Long Bottom, $63. fa ilure to
register motor vehicle.

Emergency squads
answer eight calls
Eight calls were answered bv
local units Tuesday. the Meig;
County Emergency Medical Servlces reports .
At 1:l6 a.m., Rutland took
Marvin Gardner from Meigs Mine 1
to Veterans Memorial Hospital:
Middleport at 7:51 a.m. went to
Plum St. for Elil.abeth Roush, dead
upon the unit's arrival: Middleport
went to Cole St . at 1:46 p.m. for
Philip Powell. dead upon the unit's
ani val: Pomeroy at 2:56p.m.. took
Emmett Da vis from Route 68! to
Veterans Memorial HospitaL Ra·
cine at 3:23 p.m .. went to Stivers·
vlllf' for a chimney fire a t the
Carpenter resident; Pomeroy at
6:23 p.m. went to Five Points for an
auto accident
laking G\'orge
Stevens to and Harley McDonald to
Veterans Memorial and later StevC'ns was transferred to Camden-

Clark Hospital In Parkersoorg:
Rutland at 8:55 p.m. took Carl
Bonecutter from Meigs Mine 1 to
Veterans Memorial.

Veteran!! Memorial
Admitted --Gertrude Robinson.
Coolville: Joyce Sauters. Pomeroy.
Discharged -- Rebecca Vance .
Grover Oliver. Frances Roush.
VIvian Titus.

Friday meeting
The Head Start Parent's Committee will mE&gt;Pt Friday,l :ll p.m .. at
the Head Start Center In Racine.

ACl'RESS DIES - Actress
Doma Reed best known lor her
work on 1be Donna Reed Show
in the late 50s and early ~ died
Tuescla,y at her home. Her last
TV work was on Dallas when slle
pla,yed the role oiMissEllleuntB
heblg replaced by Barbara Bel
Geddes this lall. Reed woo ao
out-&lt;11-rolnt lleUiement alter beIng llred ll'om the !lel'Es. UPI.

Fire losses
placed at

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (UP! I Col. Grover Asmus, was with her
- Donna Reed, the Iowa farmglrl when she died. a family spokesman
whose lresh good looks led to a sald. Funeral arrangements were
Hollywood career playing nice girls pending.
and Ideal mothers oot wbo won an
Reed won the Academy Award
Oscar for her'role as a prostitute, Is for best supporting actress in 195.1
dead at the age of 64.
for her role as a hooker in the
Reed died Tuesday at her home, steamy World War II film. " From
just thret&gt; days after leaving Here To Eternity," .'irtually the
Cedars-Sinal Medical Center, . only time she strayed from her allwhere she had been diagnosed as
American, girl-next-&lt;loor image. ·
having pancreatic cancer in DeReed's last role was as Miss Ellie.
cember while undergoing treat - matriarch of the Ewing clan In the
ment for a bleeding ulcer.
prtmetlme TV soap opera "DalReed's husband, retired Army
las." She was let go last yearaftera
single season and replaced by
Barbara Bel Geddes, who had
Dems meeting set
played the role until she became lU.
Reed sued the st udio and settled
The Meigs County Democratic
out
of court for $1 million, but lost
Executive Committee will meet
her
bid to be reinstated In the role.
Thursday. 7: ll p.m., at Carpenter's
She
was perhaps best known for
Hall on East Main In Pomeroy.
"The
Donna
Reed Show," which
Henry Hunter, chairman, invites
ran
from
1958
to 1966. Set in a
all Interested democrats to attend.

Tree packets now available

$117,650
The Middleport Fire Department
answered 538 calls during 1985
including 102 fires and -4.li enner·
gency runs \\ith losses Including
structures and vehicles totaUng
$ll7,650, Fire Chief Jeff Darst
reports.
Total mUes driven by all vehicles
for the year amounted to 13,00l.5
and Ihere was an average of 12 men
on each fire call.
For the month of December, 1985,
the department answeMJ 4G calls
including 11 lire calls and 35
emergency runs.
Officers selected by the department for 19!l&gt;-871nclude: Jeff Darst.
chief; Kenny Byer, assistant fire
chief; Donald Stivers, assistant
emergency chief: John Eyer. fire
captain: Gary Ellis, emergency
captain: David Hoffman, first it ..
fire; Tray McDaniel, second It ..
fire: Craig Darst, lieutenant, emergency; Frank Epple, president;
John Byer. vlce president; Bob
Eyer, treasurer: Thomas Darst.
secretary, and Jeff Darst. training
officer.

The preliminary hearing of
Jimmie Jude. 29, charged with
rape in an incident on Jan. 5, has
been continued In Meigs County
Court by Judge Patrick O'Brien.
The preliminary hearing was
to have been held yesterday and
Jude did make a court appearance with Jennifer Sheets as his
counsel.
Howcvpr, Sheets withdrew
from the case due to a conflict of
Interest. On a motiOn from
ShePis, the court continued the
hearing until 1 p.m . Jan. 31 In
order 10 allow time to find
another attorney.
ShePts requested that Jude be
given a medical examination
plior to the hearing. The court
approved the request.
Jude Is being held 1n the Meigs
County Jail on a $100,001 bond.

Tree packets and ground cover the Meigs SWCD office at 221 West
plants are being offered for sale to Second St .. second noor of the
local residents by the Meigs Soil Fanners Bank Building, or by
and Water ConseiVatlon District mailing the order in to the Meigs
Ladles Auxl!Jary.
SWCD Ladies Auxiliary, P. 0 . Box
'lbisyeartheAuxtllarylsatfering 432, Pomo&gt;roy. All orders must be
a backyard packet which contains received into the office by March 21
five each of puiple IUac, wild and must be prepaid.
cherry, Colorado blue spruce, white r-------__:_----~~~~~~~=====!
pine and dogwood tree seedlings for
$7.
Also &lt;tiered are quantity bundles
of 25 each of while pine. Austrian
pine, red pine, Norway spruce,
scotch pine, and black walnut tree
ACCOUNTING &amp; DATA PROCESSING
seediigs for $6.
618 EAST MAIN STREET
Also offered is crown vetch.
English Ivy. pachysandra and
POMEROY. OHIO 45769
winter creeper ground cover plants
OUR SERVICES INCLUDE
for $13 for 50 crowns.
- Computerized Accounti~g
- Payroll Processing
The selection of tree seedlings
- Internal Conlrot
- Fodera! &amp; State Reports
and ground cover plants does not
-Tax Planning
include any plants which are likely
- Profit &amp; Loss Statements
to spread or become a nuisance.
- Sales Analysis
- Financial Statements
Each should encourage wildlife,
control erosion, or beautify the
THE PROFESSION~l SERVICE FOR A
area.
SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS
The tree packets and ground
cover plants may be ordered from

KEHLER BUSINESS SERVICES

PH. (614) 992-7270

Tonight...mostly clear with a low
around 30. Southwest winds 5 to 15
mph.
Thursday ... partly sunny \\ith a
ltlgh in the lower 50s.
Chance of precipitation is 10
percent today and near zero
percent tonight and Thursday.
&amp;tended lorecast
FF'rlday throuxh Sunday
Fair through the period. HJghs
from the mid 40s to upper 50s
Friday and In tlle lls to mid 40s
Saturday and Sunday. Lows in the
lls early Friday and the 20s
Saturday and Sunday.

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND tUPII - Tues·
day's win ning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Number
O'Xl.
Ticket sales t o t a I e d
Sl.ll5.1b1.50, with a payoff due of

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Mt&gt;mbt"r : Un!tN PrPSs lnt ernall onal,
lnhtnd Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Assoclallon . National

Sl&gt;nlln~ l.

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Ohio 457Ql

SUIISCRIPTION RATES
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Ovr Stall Writer
The Ohio Board of Regents !s not
expccted to evaluate or comment
on House Speaker Vernal G. Rlffe's
bill to upgrade ShawneP State
Community College in Pm1smouth
10 a four-year. publir universit y.
The Chancellor of the Board of
Regents Wednesday issued a sta ll'·
mont "clarifying" a comment
made by a spokeswoman expressing doubt about the nero for a new
four-yea r state universit y.
The bill was introduced by Riffe
- who lives in the Ponsmouth
suburb of New Boston- in the Ohio
Legislature on Nov . 19, 1985. II is
pending before a House Education
Committee subcommittee.
Kate Carey, a spokeswoman fo r
the board. told a Columbus-based
newspaper Tue$11ay the regents
had not seen any studies demon strating the nero for such an
institution - with a first year
start-up price lag estimated at $38.2
million.

He sa id thC' cloS(•st slate univf'r-

Ohi o.

~ITIPr o~ .

By IARIIY EWING

"I didn 't expcctthem to come out
in favor of this," said Riffe ;of the
Board of Regents), ·-rve never
asked one board nnembcr to rome
out in favor of it. It \ in my dlsiTirl
and it's need!'d ."

meroy . Ohio. by th&lt;&gt; Ohio \'alley Pub·
l!shin£ Co mp any ' Mulllmedla, Inr .•
PomNoy. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992·2156 . ~·
oo nd dass posra~E' paid at PomiO'Toy.

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a rubber stamp.
The overall mUitary bu dg('t will be reduced $5.8
biiUon. The other half of the cuts wtll come from the
rest of government . except for Soctal Secu nty
payments and a number of programs for tile poor.
Congressional aides sa id that although Socia l
Security benefits cannot be cut, the agency 's
administrative budget will fall under the knife, which
may lower the quality of servi('(' to the elderly

with a muumum of disruption." budget director
James Miller told repol1ers. "We want to get the
deficit d0-"'11. It is import ant 10 do so."
As painful as the cuts will be, they only hlnt at what
will follow. President Reagan's fisca ll987 budget will
lx• sent to Congress next month and reponedly
includes at least another $54 billion in spending

Gra mm-Rudman . passed in !hr waning days of
Congress' 19t6 session, Il'CIUires pm~'l essivr reduc-

Miller replied: "You betcha ."
The fiscall986 cuts call for a 4.3 percen !reduction in
most agencies and a 4.9 percent cut in the military.
Under a special rule, the Pemagon can protect some
areas. Milit ary pay will not be cut. officiaL' said. so the
rf'ductions will most likely be made in weapons
purchases . operations, and research.

reduct ions.
Asked if Ihe president would mE&gt;Pt the 19!17 targets.

tions in the deficit until it il&lt; climinaled ln 1991. Under a
special prov ision, the $11.7 billion cut is the ma,ium
for thi s fiscal year.
"Thr administration is commillrd to carrying out

the congressional manda lc wf Gmmm -Rudmanl

sity to Shawnee Is at Athens. 90
miles away. "The study showed it
was feas ible." hr sa id.
The ShawneP State feasiblllll'
study t'C!erred toby Riffe. however.
makes no mention of the existence
of Rio Grande College and Community College.
Chancellor Cou lter said the re·
gents hav&lt;' not made any statewide
studies in recent years on the need
for new universities.
The Sha wnE&gt;P proposal. however,
would seem to tun counter to the
Board of Regent s' position as stated
in its 1976 Master Plan.

MOUNDSVILLE, W.Va. (UPI)
- Inmates at the West Virginia
Penilentiary struck their prison
jobs and other activilies Wednesday, accusing cornections officials
of not fulfi lling promises to reopen
the prison store or resume normal
outdoor recreation periods in the
aftermath of a riot rwo weeks ago.
Meanwhile, Gov. Arch Moore
announced that inmates will be
transferred to the medium- security Huttonsville Correctional Cent er
to relieve crowding at 1he
maximum-security prison.
No violence had been associated
wit h the strike, which began after
breakfast about 7:30a.m. Deputy
Corrections Commissioner William
Whyte sa id .
"There's no change," Whyte said
in the late afternoon. "The warden
is in the institution and is offering
Inmates the oppo11Unily to go out
for recreation."
The strike apparently began
after breakfast. when inmates

The regents' pl"n roncludes there
is no need for another sta le
university or college in Ohto, nor
any need for addit ional two-year
ca mpuses. inasmuch as the goal of
establishing a campus within commuting distance of every Ohio
citizen has been achieved.
Coulter said he was uncerta in
what effect . if any, the es tablishing
of a Shawnee State University
would have on Ohio's other 12 stale
universities.

VILLAGE SOLICITOR A Rio Grande College and
Meif!l' County Prosecuting .&lt;\11orCommunit y College task force
'"'Y Frederick W (Rick) Crow
appointed to study the impact c1 the
m has been named new village
proposaf. however. concludes:
sollcltor for SynlQuse Village.
"Such an arrangement would be
Crow Is a resident of the
counter to the best interest of Rlo
Syrncusc communitJ'.
Grande ... "
Since both Rio Grande and the
proposed four-year Institution at
Portsmouth wou ld be pulling from
a service area of overlapping
adjacent counties, the task force
The statu s of an acess road from
study projects potential tosses
1ranging from 10 to 00 perCPnt 1 of SR 3J to Carper' s i': ursery was .one
students attending Rio Grand&lt;' of thr major items discussed at
Wednesday' s we&lt;&gt;k ly meetlngoflhe
from southeastern Ohio counties.
In a report to the community Meigs County Commission. Meigs
college board of tru stees on Dec. 11. County res ident Grorge Carper
1!185. Rio Grande College President discussed the road ~&lt;ilh the board
Clodus R. Smith advis!'d. "The and Phil Roberts, enginee r.
Carpcr is a nxious for paperwork
impact appears to be ~ealest on
the ju nior and senior levels because to be completed so tha t constmction
can begin thi s summf'r.
of the tuition dilferential.
Robert s reporll~ he n&lt;'l~S some
"Loss of income to RJO Grande
College could be as much as additional inf01m ation from the
S600.CIXI to $8XI,CIXI annually and stale bcfor&lt;• he can complete
S230.CIXI to Rio Grande Community fi eldwork on the protX&gt;sed site for
the new road . Hobcrts said he would
College," he said.
While viewed by many as an be in rontact wit h the stat~ this
unnecessary addition to the state 's week .
Thl' state romoleted the Rt. 33
higher education sy tem , the pi'Oposal - most political observers
a~'lW- is assured of passage.
That assurance is based on the
personal int erest taken in the
project by the powerfu l Speaker of
Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical
the House- it 's the first bill he has Corporation todav announcru it will
introduced during his long tenure as undC'rtake a fundamC'nt al restrucspeaker.
_tuting that will include the forma "If any other member introduced l ion of a holding compa ny . a
such a bill, it would have litUe refinancing of bank debt and the
chance of getting through the raising of Of'\"-' capital.
Genera l Assembly because of a
In making lhC' announcement.
feeli ng we have too many four -year Cornell C. Maier, chai rman and
institutions now," Rep. Waldo chief rX('('UI ive officer of Katser
Bennett Rose, R-Lima , is quoted as Aluminum. said. "The new snuc
saying Wednesday.
ture. refinanced debt and new
· !Continued on page 121
capita l will grE&gt;atly Increa se our

Alvin Gregory and Dan Lehman
told prison kitchen workers the~'
\\'ere to discontinue work and were

"on strike," Whyte said.
A sand\\ich lunch was served to
the prison's 648 inma tes in their
cells. he said.
The prisoners are appa rently
angry that the prison store has not
llPPn reopened following a New
Year's Day riot that lasted 42 hours
during which three inmates were
killed and 17 hostages were taken.
Whyte said.
"The store was one of the areas
they destroyed," he said. "They
stole everything and set fire to lhe
store. We're trying to get that back
in shape but we ca n't have s tore call
yet ."
Another apparent reason for the
strike was no outdoor recreation.
\!Jhyle said.
"Recreation was scheduled lor
today and it would have gone on il
this strike had not happened ," he
said.
Warden Jerry Hedrick, who

continually toured the institution in
an attempt to brea k the strikP, wa s
not available for comment.
Whyte said the strike may have
started by a disgruntled corrections
officer or an inma\e spreading a
rumor that the store would not be
reopened and outdoor recreation
periods would not be res tored .
" II' s not a case of giv ing in to
them but overcoming rumors and
making sure they have straight
information." he said.
Meanwhile. fifty-ttu·ee Inmates at
the medium-security Huttonsville
facility had been moved to work
release centers, while another 22
had been transferred to Ca mp
Anthony. a medium-seculity work
camp to make room for Moundsville prisoners, Moore said .
An additional 15 inmates at
Huttons\i lle will be sent to the
Pruntytown correctional faciUiv
Thursday and another ll Inmates
will be placed on an extended oome
furlough leave program. he said.

Access road status commissioners' topic
four-lane in the late 1960's. cutting
off Carper's Nursery from the main
road in the process. Carper has
been working since 1972 to get the
sta te to cooperate in building an
a~cess road to the nu rsery . The
state last year agr~ to cost -share
the project with Carper.
It was reported the county had
received a judgment totaling
$468.10 from William McClure .
Bill McKinney, county dog
warden, filed suit on behalf of the
commissioners against McClure. to
regain money that pald out in
animal claims to Emma Carleton
of Pomeroy for the loss of two
sheep. each In a separate incident.
McClure was the owner of two pitt

' responsibuUs found to be directly
bl e for the deaths of the sheep .
This was the first time the county
has regained mDil&lt;'Y paid out in
animal claims. Such claims are
paid out ·of 1he dog and ken!l&lt;'l fund
which is the on ly means of
operating the county animal
shelter.
Mike Swisher, director of the
Meigs County Department of Human SeiVIces. and Rick Crow,
prosecuting attorney, were at
yesterday's meeting to sign a new
IV-D contracl for 19&amp;&gt;. This contract is a cooperative agreement
among the commission, prosecutor, welfare department and the
sta te for child support enforcement.

In other ma"ers. the commission
adopted a force account resolution
for the county highway department
and re-appoin ted Herbert Shields
and Orion Roush to the Melg&lt;
Coun ty Regional Plann i ng
Commission.
The board is hoping to meet in
Columbus next week with EPA and
Bob Leventree of the John David
Jones engineering firm to discuss
the upcoming Tuppers Plains Sewage Disposal Project.
Present for Wednesday's nneet lng were Comrnisslo!'l'rs Manning
Roush. David Kobtentz and RJ.
chard Jones. Clerk Mary Hobstel·
trr and Ma nha Chambers .
assistant.

Kaiser announces restructuring plans

Committee hopes
to develop SR 35
A romrnitteP repll'senting seven
Ohio countifos - including Ga llia
County - will soon be working to
encourage development of U.S. 35
along a corridor stretching frnm
Indiana to Wes t Virginia. .
The Idea for the commiltee came
ou 1 of a meeting in Xenia Monday
where near ly 70 sta te, county and
municipal officers, as well as state
and local highway officia ls nnet.
The committee's Immediate goal
is widening the highway and
making ot her Improvements.
The long-term goals include
attracting new lndu strtes and openIng up markets In the southeastern
Unjled States to existing businesses
and· Industries, according to S.L.
Stephan, executive direct or of th~
Xe nia Are a Ch a mber of
Commerce.
Lett ers will bemallro from Xenia
within three weeks asklng for two
members to be appoin ted to the

The budget -balancing law will dealt he adminlstra·
lion's arms buildup a major t'eversa l for the first
lime, the Pentagon said Wednesday.
AI tile While House. a sen ior official indicated the
Pentagon might go so far as to pad its future budget
requests to protect Reagan's "Star Wars" missile·
defense system from the budget ax.
Salaries of federa l employE&gt;Ps won't be cut . but the
operating budgets of their agencies will get the ax.
Congressional salaries also escaped the blade. "We
didn't want to (cull down to 417 congressmen !from
the CUITE'nl 4351," quipped Miller.
In Agricu lture, the required $1.3 billion cut will
mean smaller payments to farmers and a reduction
of the number of Inspectors at meat processing
plants. officials said.

Inmates strike penitentiary

College need
questioned

four-year institutions. ··

Published f'Vt:&gt;ry aftE'rnoon , Monday
thnX.IRh Friday, 111 Court St. . Po ·

en tine

Pomeroy - Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 16, 1986

WASHINGTON !UP! I - The first bite of the
Gramm· Rudman deficit reduction law will swallow 5
percent of the budgets of nearly all federal agencies
this year. in the initial step toward a balanced budget
by !991.
The nation' s two big budget offices - the
administration's Office of Management and Budgpt
and the Congressional Budget Office - estimated
Wednesday that this year 's budget deficit will top $220
billion. That figure tliggers $117 billion in cuts under
Gramm-Rudman tha t mu st be mad e by March 1 in
near ly every agency, from the Pentagon to the Postal
Service.
The General Accounting OfficL· mu st cerl ifv tl1e
figuncs next Tuesday for actual budget cutting to
bcgtn, but sincP the two budget agencies appear to be
in agreement. the certification will be little more tha n

Chancellor William Coulter said
W&lt;'dnesday. howP\·er. that Riffe
explained his plan to the board last
.June !4. knowin~ that " the board
ha s no legal role in the creation of

(USPS 14~111G i
A DMs lon of Multimedia, Inc.

at y

Federal budget cuts put at 5 percent

what's going on dOY.'TI th&lt;'re."

The Daily Sentinel

To Thr Dally

Vol.35, No .190
Copvrighted 1986

"No one really knows brc'auS(' no

0116.

•

e

one's rrally lookf'd into i1 tha t
d('('ply ." Carey sa id. ''I'm not SU[{'

$283,466. riCK-4

POSTMA,&lt;;TER: Send actlrPSs changt&gt;S

Pag!l7

Rape case
continued ...

Weather forecast

Advertising Rl"prPSf'ntallve , Br3nham
N('Wspal)('r Sa l ~. 73.1 Third A\'(•nu(',
New Y ork . NPW York 10017.

·:~y:pQthermia &gt;

"ryplcal" American community,
the show cast her as the wife of a
successful pediatrician (the late
Carl Betzl a nd mother of two
children (Shelley Fa bares and'Paul
Pet ersrn t .

commlllcc by Preble, Montgomery , Greene, Fayette. Ross,
Jackson and Gallia counties. The
group is expec t~o hold Its first
meeting In March.
The Ohio Depa11ment of Transportation is scheduled 10 award
contracts in August for the U.S.
35-bypass around Jackson, accord·
ing to Keith Swearlngton, opera tions engfnE&gt;Pr for the Ohio Depart ment of Transportation 's Dlstrict9
office at Chillicothe.
The first section of the Jackson
bypass wil1 ex tend 2.~ miles from
just west of Jackso~ County Rd . 59
to SR 93 north or the city. Cost for
the project has been estimated at
$14.5 million.
The second section - a1 an
estimated cost of $14 million- will
st rerch !.82 miles from SR 93 to the
Appalachian Highway.
Both sections are scheduled for
completion by
. the fall of 19!§l.

.

used to pay down back debt and
make acquisitions 1hat meet our
strategic objectives."
The restructuring, which is subject to shareholder approval. ca lls
for the fotmation of a holding
company which will eventually
include five separate operating
subsidiar ies. The operatin g subsidiaries will be Kaiser Aluminum &amp;
Chemical Coi]J(,ration, composed
of all aluminum and certain
industlial chemicals activities:
Kaiser Development Company,the
company's real estate subsidiary:
Kaiser Energy, Inc., the company's
oil and gas business: Harshaw/Filtrol Partnership, the company's
industrtal and specially chemicals
joint venture: and a new corporation which \\ill serve as an

operallng fiPxibility and strengthe11
our ability to maximize share-

holder value. A key objective of this
program will be to posit Jon a
resttuctut»d Kaiser Aluminum to
raise fund s through Ihe issuance of
pt»ferred stock and subordinated
debt secu til ies 1hat can then be

NOW CENTER OF ACI'IVITY- The old Mason Fumllure plant on
Faif'!ll'Oilnds Road, norih ol Polnl Pleasant, adjacent 10 the M880n
County Industrial Park, has become a cenler ol activity this wook.
rannech Industries Inc.. M Injection molding OOD11Jany whlch will

'

.

acquisition vehicle.
The restructuring plan was deveMa ier said, "The reorganization loped in conjunction with DrexPI
into separate companies will allow Burnham La mbert Inc. Drexel
us to maximize the full long-term Burnham has advised the company
potential of each of theseoperations that the plan is a reasonable and
for the benefit of all of our attractive financial program and
shareho lders."
that Drexel Burnham is optimistic
Follg\\ing the reorganization. the plan can be irnplemenled. lt has
Ka iser Aluminum intends to issue also advised that the successful
preferred stock of the new holding Implementation of this plan \\ill
company and use the proceeds to enable the compa ny to achieve
retire bank debt. Subsequent Issues more financial nexibtllty \\ith
of subordinated debt or preferred respect to its . current bu sinesses.
stock of the holding company will Furthennore. Drexel Burnham
be used to further n&gt;duce bank debt believes that Kaiser Aluminum will
and to finance appropriate acquisi- be better able to continue its
tions, wltlch \\ill Pnable the com- diversification pmgram with st rapany to diversify In line with Its tegic acquisitions that will enable it
strategic plan and make use of tax to accelerate the utilization of lis
loss carryforwards and Investment ' aVailable tax benefit s.
tax credits.

employ 30 people In lis st&amp;fl-up p~U; Is expected lo employ 85 people al
the end ol the first year ol operation. HopeluDy,lhe !acUity wiD help lhe

economic base ol Ulll tri-oo~ area.

·'

'

�•

ThUf1dav. January 16, 1986

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MI\SON i\REA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of Ttlr Assor iat ro Prrss . l nland Dally Pr€'ss :\ ssocia
!ion and thP AmPrican NewspapN Publlshrn; Associa tion .
LETTERS OF' OPINION ar(' ~'' l'l('Oillt' . Th('~· should l::x&gt; lf'Ss than .'l11l 1.0.-urd~
Ions:- . Alllf'ttN S arp subjf'Cttof'dlllng and must bt"' s lgnro with nam C'. addrPss ,md
lt&gt;lephonr number . No unsigned lrllt'rs will IJ(' publi sh('(! Ldlrr ~ sh0u1c1 l)j' in
goOO ta~tf' . addrf'ssln g issut'S . not pt&gt;rsooalitlf's

Home ownership down
- but affordability up
Although home ownership became more affordable in lqf:i than a ny tim&lt;'
since the late l971ls. the percentage of Americans who mvn homes has
clPdined so far this decade to a 17-year low. a new study said Wedinesday . ·
The report, by the League of Savings lnstilu tions. also said oome buyers
were "returning to traditional. time-honored housing expensE' to -income
ratios and were increasingly relying on shorter-term mortgages- no! on
inflation- to increase their home equity."
The league report was based on a sutvey· of mol'i' !han 16.000 mortgage
loans made last year.
_ The study found "significant interest rate declines and moderate price
Increases" made home ownership in t ~1"more afford~ble than at an)'
tinne since the late 1970s."
But it said home ownership rrends continued a downward slide !hal
began in !98l
"After rising steadily throughout the postWorld War I l era and after
reaching a peak of 65.6 percent in l'lffi. the' percentage of American
households who own !heir own homes has fallen in C'\'er)' )'ear of the 198Js ...
the sun:ey said. "ln the third quarter of 1985. !he home 01mrrship rate
reached 63.9 percent. its lowest level since 1968."
The report said those findings s oow "that while !he desu·e for home
ownership rPmains strong. home ownership opportunity canoot be taken
for granted."
I! said !he median age of first' time home bu)·crs continued !o rise in 1985
and those buyers were 21'2 years older than they were in 1979.
The report also said a second inrome was an important element for
nearly 71l percent of first -time buyers. :vlore than half of! hos.' tume buyers
reported the second income aceoun!ed for more !han ll percent of tota l
household earnings.
"And the spread between !he median incomes of first -time tume buvers
and the general population appeared to be wide ning," the report said.
Other findin gs of 1he sun:ey included:
-Median ptices of all types of homes naliom•.1dc IUS&lt;' fi·om S65.1.lXl in
1983 to $75.000 in !9fli and the median inromes of home buwrs mse from
Sli.987 in 1983 to $42.396 in !9fli.
-The San Francisco metropolitan area. with a median home price of
$!52.00l. was the most expensive housing market in the !&lt;'ague stud\'.
followed by New York t$129.7001. Boston t$126.0001. Los An g e I e s
i$L23.1.lXli and Anaheim -Santa Ana-Garck•n Cmve. Calif. t$122.00JI.
. -Prices were !owl'S! in the Pittsburgh area. ~&lt;· here the median home
cost was $54.152. followed by Dalton. Ohio. t:s:&gt;l.750t. Cincinnati t$:il.2001,
Bloomlngton-Nonnal. 1ll. t$5.1.9001 and Akmn. Ohio and Rcadmg. f'a .
i$56.0001 .
-Median downpayments rose from $12.1XXl in 1983 to SIUOO in !9fli. but
Ihe uownpayment represented less than lJ percent of the purchase price of
the horne in 5.'&gt; .9 percent of the cases.
-New homes represented 22.1 percent of !he market in 1985, older
homes tfhose at lea st 25-)·ears-old t accounted for 33.9 percent of the
market a nd rondominiums made up !.li p!'rL-..nl of the' market.

Letters to editor
Thanks nice folks
First I would like to thank Mr .
and Mrs . Rober! Beegle and Sacre!
Heart Church for the nice surprise
they gave my children and also I
would like to say I have met some of
the best people anyone could know
here in Racine are-a .
People here have alwa)·s been
good to me and m,- children bu! I
won'! apologize for !he lener I ~&lt;TOt e

last yrarabout fhPwoman tharwa s

so !\ure peoplr on welfarr wrrr
lil'lng so high on hog . Tha t was a
stupid statement for acyone to
make When I read-so mething like
!i'&lt;l! i! makes rn)' blood boil. She
soould tr,· it. But I am sure she
wouldn 't like 1! .
Anna Mar Lf'a mond
Racine. Ohio

We ll thcv did i! aga in. Council
gets 1~ gold mine and the poor
people who llve there or work in
Pomeroy gel the shaft again .
This so called needed ta .x is a joke
and Ills no! funny. What have !hev
done wl!h all of that money. thai all
t~ people paid out before.

!own again . If thPy do. thP)' must
oo! be able !o find an oones! person
!M! could handle !he job. Why no!
pu! !he clerk -trea surer in tl!P job'
The d erk trPasurPr got a ra ise from
!hi:• p&lt;'Ople's mone)· la st time.
I think thev should ha,·e a school

Berau!'=r vou surr can't SE"P a lot of
Jmpmvem~nt s done with it, unless
you ca II people moving ou 1of !0"11
or businPSsrs rlosing up.

teachers should be tho council
mPmlx&gt;rs from Middleport . Berau..-P tht:·~· could tf'arh Pomrro.\·
cou nc il how to ha ndle and manag r
moncv tike i! shou ld be.
In clos ing . !he peoplp of Pomrr01·
and !llf' people who work there
!:&lt;&gt;Iter wake up and see wha! is
~ing on. If not . !lwv will wake up
one day dlld PomProy will be a
descr1ed ghost !own.
Steve Burton
Middleport . Ohio

The rouncil said in the paper i!
had 400 names on a petition. Out of
l~m. how many are living in
Pomerov or working in Pomeroy ?

What did they do. get people who
don't have 10 pay this tax thatl ive in
Pomerov ? Like some people on
welt are 'or people who are reiired .
What a rc t~)' going to do about a
··1 q_Qmi~lor . Get one out of

member~

Thursday, January 16. 1986

The American PEN. you will
have noticed. invi!ed Secretary of
State George Shultz to address its
48th International Congr ess. which
convened last Sunday In 'lew York
City. Needless to say. t~re were
those who objected to the invitation.
perhaps most prominently E.L.
Doctomw. woo \\TOle to The New
York Times to make the point that
PxactJ~·

what \.vriters 00 not \.\'ant is

politicians addressing them. He
sounded. rea lly. rat her fl at. and
herr's guessing that il Adlai
Stevenson. or an)' old Kennedy. had
ll!en secreta!)' of state. E.L.
Doc!orow et al. would suddenly
ave viewed the inv itat ion as
unerly felicitou s.
An opening •ddress by til'
sec reta11' or state to an internalional congress is a form of
diplomatic rour1esy. surely . I!
hap,.,ns that George Shultz is a
scholar, a former professor. wOOse

1iews are Interesting wh.ether he
speaks as a socretary of state- or
wti!es (four books , in his caseT.
There are writers who fancy that it
is their obligation to be iconoclastic
in virtua lly all matters. Besides,
Mr. Shultz is associa ted with the
foreign policy of Ronald Reagan,
which is enough to dlsquaiiJy him
from approval by "'Titers who,
never having experienced life
under such as the Sand.mistas, are
prepared to ·side with the Sandinistas il only because they are
anti· American.
But George Shultz also faced a
very concrete question, namely the
McCarran-Walter Immi gratio n
and Naturalization Act of 1952. That
ac t authorizes the government to
de ny a visa to any alien wOO is a
communist or anarchist or advoca tes communist or anarchist

ideas. Professor John Kenneth
Ga tbrai!h , addressing 1he rongress.

~ou cr..N'i IALI\ 1o ft..E

11-\r&gt;.i 't-lt..Y/ R\~T 61JYS?
\Ell 1-\lM \-it; Cl&gt;v~'T
\Al~ it&gt;·h\'i: l\\\.1:.
1\-lto-1. .. G\IYS?. ..

G'JYS! ...

declaimed that !hal act should lJ&lt;&gt;
But two thoughts cross the mind.
repealed, a nd Mr. Galbraith. who is
One of !hem is the current
thoughtful enough never to leave agitation for passage of !he Gem&gt;details unattended, suggested tha t cide Convention. many of whose
the president' s State of the Union
fea tures I have myself approved
speech should begin by calling for
(e.g. in my book, "United Nations
the repeal of the McCarran -Walter
Journal"!. U the Senate confirms
Act. George Shultz dld oot address
the ronventlon. giving to It the
the question directly, satisfying supremacy tha t attaches to treahimsetl. and gelling spot applause.
ties, then an individual expressing
by saying, "We will never deny genocidal convictions could, some
physical acct'ss to an~'One t:Jecause . lawyers believe, be ha uled into a
of !he beliefs he or she may cour1 and imprisoned.
espouse."
·
I should add !hal except for the
U.N. fa ctor in !his, I am not
Mr. Shultz is quit e rlgh! in taking
the pragmatic position that our automal ically intimida ted by the
idea trat people who preach that
republican institutions are In lac! so
st urdy that ills highly unlikely that whole sets of other people should be
any one, or even !wo rommurjstsor
killed shou ld be removed so meanarchists come over here to sow where, say to the other side of the
Berlin Wall , until !hey cool off. But
seditious seeds need to be kept out.
llley can make !he usual lec ture we have. e.g. , in Nicaragua, people
circu it - mostly !he expensive woo not only have advoca ted
colleges - roceive !heir standing g&lt;&gt;nocide, but practiced 11 -against
ovations, and eventuall y go home.
!he Miski!o Indians. And In Ch ina.
!he Cullu ral Revolution, though nol
strictly genocidal. was its equivalent. if you believe thai !he
eli mination of a class by profession
is not very different fmm the
elimin at ion of a class by race. One
can. I believe. properly refer to.
sa~. Pol Pot's "genocidal" war
against all· literate Cambodia ns. So
maybe Professor Ga lbrait h should
!ell us how he is going to square !hat
circle?

u

c

And !hen. also, people tend to
quote Jefferson's famous sentence
without giving il due thought. He
wro te. "Those who wish to dissolve
1~ Union or to ch ange its republican fn tm shou ld stand undisturbed
as monument s of the safety w1th
which f'lTOr of opinion may bP
tolcratA:I where reason is left free to .
romba! i! " You catch !he catch in
1hat sen ten ('(l? Jefferson is saying.
It' s OK to tolera te ant i-republican
agitators bf'causf' it is safe to
..I.s:-; umP 1hat they will not prevail , iJ
n\:~sonahic men are free to combat
ttk:'m . But

of course the JXlint is:

~ !hey threaten to preva il J S 1hf'~' havp in so many countries in

What

our lifetime. most conspicuous ly.
German~ in 19:1.1. Argentina in 1945.
Jlld Ru ss ia in 1917'

and thr

Today in history
Today is Thut'Sday . .Jan . 16. the 16t h day of 1986 wi!h 349 to follow.
The moon is approaching it s firs! quarter.
ThP moming stars are Mercur• . Venus, Mars and Sa tum .
The evening star is Jupi!er.
Those born on this date are under the sign d Capricom . They include
German philosopher Franz Brcntano in IB:J\; Andre Michelin. !he French
Industrialist who first mass·, produced rubber automobile tires, In l&amp;'iJ:
singer Ethel Mf'nna n in 1909; baseba ll pitcher Jay "Dizzy" Dean in 1911 :
auto racer A.J . Foyt in 193&gt; I age 511. and rou nt ry singer Ronnie Milsap in
1916 (age 401 .
On this date In history:
.
In 19~. the United States wen! legally "drl' .. as prohibition of alcoholic
-beVerages became effect lve under the 1R!h amendment to the Cons! i!ution.
It was repealed In 1933.
In 1925. Leon Trotsky was dismissed as dtalrman of the Russian
Revolution Military Coo neil.

ALIEN HONORED - Marcus Allen, slar mmlng back ol the Los
Angeles Raiders, holds the Schick Trophy with wNch he was lftSEilted
In New York Wednesclay night In recognition of his helng named the
National Football League's Most Valuable Pla_ver. The Schick Trophy Is
p........,.. anmJally to the NFL's MVP as voted by the Professional
Football Writers of i\merica. UPI.

I

Nursing home abuse ___J_ac_k_A_n_de_r_so_n_&amp;_·J_o_se_p_h_Sp_e_ar
WASHINGTON - Federal bU·
reaucrats have spent more than
five years dotting the i's and
crossing the !'son a wrely needed
rr\ulation that wou ld punis h
nursing-home opera tors who mis·

!real their e lde r ly Medicare
patients.
Congress ordered 1~ regulation
drafted in !!IJl. I! has ye! !o lx&gt;
issuro in final form- an incxcusa ·
ble dela;.· that no onP seems able to
explain .
If 's not that the proposed rPgula·
lion is all that complicat ed . Essen liall\', i! would hi! negligent nursing
home operators where I! huJ1s most
- In the pocketbook
Calling for " intrrmC'diate , sanc·
lions" short of kicking transgres·
sors out of the Medicare program
altogether. the regulation wUI allow
federal officials !O withhold Medi·
care reimbursements on new ad ·
missions for up to 11 mont hs until
the target ed nursing home brings
it s oprratio ns into complianC'i' V.·i th

fcdrral
s~tmdard s.

"The ability to impose interme-

diate sanctions will certainly re·
present a positive step toward
impnl\'ing nu rsing home condi·
lions.·· Hralt h and Human Servi('('S
Department Inspec tor General RJ .
chard Kusscrow wro te in a draft

report las! November. "The sanction 's deterrent £'ffect can havr a
significant impact. However. ag.
gress h·r enforce ment will be
necessa ry .

The record so far gives ti!tlr
indication of aggress ive follow -up
by the agency responsible. the
Heal!h Care Financing Adminis!ra·
!ton. A spokes mJ!I acknowledged
that tnc prepa ration of lhe regulati on hacl taken "an unu sually bng

period of lime. " bu! !old our
a5'ocia!e' Tony Capacclo. " ! ha\·en·r gotten a sa tisfactory answer
to why i! ha s been de layed ." H~
added thai the agency hopes to have
!he fina l rule ready soon for
submission to HPaith and Human
Sf'rdces Secretary Otis Bowen.

sa!e!v and heal!h
r;:u ssrro\~· · s

•

tl'port .

using

thP

heal!h-finance agency's own com puler information. concluded !hat
"I he inciden ts of substandard nu rsing faciliti es is widl'sprcad ." ln
rac t. his investigat ors arp JX)lishing
up a list of -14 nursing homes across
!he rountry !ha l ar~ "likely candl·
dales lbr !he intermediate sa nction
and require Ithe ag('ncy 's ) immedlate attention."
The agency enforcf'mrnt chief,
Philip Nat hanson . assured us:
"We're waitin g !o see !hal lis!.
We're going !o chase them all
down."

The -14 homes on !he inspPC!or
~'Pnenil' s hi! lis! have a to!a I
ca parit ~ of 6,618 patient s. and
include facilities in 21 stales:
Alabama . Alaska. Arkansas. Cali ·
fomla. Colorado. Florida, Illinois.
Kdllsas. Maine, Massachusetts.
Michigan. Mississ ippi, Montana,
New Jersey. New York. Not1h
Dakota. Oregon. Tennessee. Texas.
Virginia dlld Wisconsin . All i4
homes "display s!mng indications
of chmnic substandard ro nditions,"
Kusserow wro tr .

In addi! ion to the -14 homes fort he

elderly. !he invcstigalors lb und 946
nurs ing homes for !he ment ally
·retarded I hal have repeatedly
' oola!ed at least one of !he federal
standards rl'garded as critical to
qua lity carr .
In 38 of thPse facilities including 11 in Connecticut and four
each in Louisiana and Ohio operators "app lied physical rcs!rainl s to patients wi thout just
ca use or applied mechanical restraint devices which could cause
physical injury ."
In another 27 homes for mental
patient s - including 11 in Mississippi and lluw each in Connecticut
aod Georgia - operators "used
dnrgs excessively as punishment.
for Ihe convenienC(' of Ihe staff or as
a substitut~ for ac!ivP trea tment."
An a_ddiliona l 96 mental homesincluding 45 in new York . 10 in
Connecticut and eight in Louisiana.
" were ou! of compliance wit h the
Lilc Safely Code of the National

WASH INGTON iNEA) - The re· health studies, surveys or analyses to
cenl fatal accident in eas t-centml eva luate the possi bility that the ex istOklahoma ca used by the rupture of a ing plant has a l r~ady harmed human
tank containing letha l materials health," says NACE.
graphically illustrates the unforgiving
Ever si nce th&lt; plant was constructnature of nuclear technology .
ed. Kerr-McGee has sought to mmiIt also demons! rates the futtlity of mJze lhe surface conta mination probpowerless ci tizens· efforts to deal wt!h lem by seeking permission for waste
the technology's powerful proponents dtsposa l through deep·well injec!ton.
- m bot h the publlc and priva te sec· even though that also poses hazards
tors - on issues affecting hea lth and
In 1982, the Oklahoma Health Desa fet y
parLment issued a temporary permit
The rntegnty of the nuclear materi - authorizing the disposal of 5 million
als fabriratmg process at the Gore, gallons of radioactrve waste annually
Okla .. factltty of the Sequoyah Fuels - but four years later. the state still
Corp.. a subsidiary o! the Kerr- has not held hearings on a permanent
McGee Corp . has been at issue since permit.
the federal gove rnment first issued a
A 1978 inspectron of the Seuuovah
license in 1969
fa cil lly conducted by the Nuclear
Throughout much of the ensuin g 17 Regulatory Comm ission found six inyears. local residents have been con- stances of non-cornp hance with ll cerned about a pattern of spills and cen!'e requ trem ents. including Kerr leaks of radioactive materials that McGee's fa ilu re to adequately sample
have contaminated the soil and water sot I and st reams for ev1dcnce of radio--: including the Arkansas and Illinois active buildup
rrvers.
An NRC inspection last yea r found
Although one estima te suggests that 15 sa fety vrolattons and concluded
the Sequoyah plant has been discharg- that !here had been "a la ck of manageing an average of 5.000 kilograms of me nt overSJght " by Kerr-McGee. a
uranium annually into the Illinois Ri•· ftrm probably best known as the em er, Kerr-McGee acknowledges that ployer of Karen Silkwood at its now ·
"no attempt has been made" to mea. closed Cimarron nuclear materials
sure - much less contain - the plant near Crescent. Ok la.
contamination
Miss Silkwood . a victim of plutoniOne recently completed indepen- um contamina ti on, died in an auto acdent study of waste management at cident wh ile en route to p'resent allethe facility found a 20 percent in- gations about the company's sa fety
crease in the area's ca nce r rate since lapses.
the plant began operation.
A federalc ourt jury ordered KerrA citizen's organization composed McGee to pay Miss Si lkwood's estate
primarily of Cherokee Indians, Native $10 mtllion after finding a pattern of
America ns for a Clean Environment, "gross. willful and wanton " neglisays it is disturbed that at least 200 gence in !he plant's operation.
The recent Seq uoyah incident again
people living within a !O·mile radius
of the plant have died ot cancer wilhin suggests a lack of health and safety
the past decade.
precau tions. The death ot one worker
"There is no evidence that Kerr- and the injury of more than 30 other
McGee has conducted any population peop le was the product of tw.o improp-

TEAM

WL Pet.

North Gallta ............ .. 11
Southern ................... 10
Hannan Trace ............ 9
Oak Hill ................... 6
Symmes Valley. ......... 4
Eastern ................ ... .. 4
Southwestern .. . . .. ... . . . . 2
Kyger Creek . .. . . . ... .. .. 0

Team

W
Southern .................. 9
Hannan Trace ............ 7
North Gailla .............. 7
Oak Hill ....... . ..... ..... 4

.750
.546
.364
.333
.!54

Frlda_v's games

.!00

Hannan Trace at Eastern
Southern at Oak Hill
North Gallla at Symmes Valley
Kyger Creek at Southwestern

L Pet.
0 !.COO
1 .875
1 .875
4 .500

Satunla_v's game
Kyger Creek at Portsmouth Notf('
Dame

Leading scorers
All games

SVAC only
Pl&amp;fff , nm
Mlkr Kromp-r , NC .
Jotm Shf&gt;ppard. sv .
·Gror.r LfolK'tunan. t:as1
ME&gt;&amp;nn'!i . HT

G F~ Ft f'b i\ w

Pllpr, 1eM1
Mllfl&gt; Kl'fflrrr. NC.

Grf'l Lf&gt;arhman. Ea111
JaM Shf1&gt;pard, S\'
Dfokr BarTPJ. HT .
Todd Adams. Soo
MI._, Half. OH

.... 12 !H .t ! 'ZJl
. 12 ~ 21 21J

II !(I l1 l!t1
12 7!1 42 1911
12 1R 7i 111.1
... tl iB 'll 167

SPan Collry. HT ...
Sly Boomfk"'d, S\.' .

.. 12 ~ :.i

UU

JH
Ji 6
lti.5

m

Mlk' !lair, OH .
Todd Adam." . SoY
Todd Hol.sl('{n. KG
!Wan Colk&gt;:&gt;. HT
Ja~ EU1 k'k. Sou

1~ .3

15.2
\4 ."J

St-· Eloomfttid. ~ \ ' .
Todd Drri. ~ (; .. ,

11 64 29 157 14.3
12 74 '!I rro 14 .2
. 12 ~ ~ 16-4 13.7

Todd Hob;k'ln. NG
Todd [Wol. NG .. .

Ji'ff Cald\l.•f'l.l.

J.-fl C•ldwell . Eu1 ....

..

Er1r F'ayf', OH ..

.. II 4tl

)I)

t5

..

North C.allla
O;.tK H IU .
F..astrorn

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South~~o'('Sif"rn

K~·~ C'm'k

11

lllorth

R.1

~1

HilnRiill

n ·~tM'

s~·ITifr'oN&gt;

II

\'atrco.

11

I'OOflh ('.:.liLa

"!'1~

llli

nq Ill

\i 1M lli

2)1

~"!l

fl&lt;&gt; 106

2ti

)l

JO.J

n

HanMn Trllw(·

M 216 Ill&gt;

f..a~k'rn

~

w

tl

1911 114

.~ 10

..
\'&lt;tl~'l

S1·rnrr.&gt;'&lt;

Soulh~trr n
Ky~

frrrk

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,...,I Iii.:.!

6.1.11

'I

112

1(2

~

~ 2

~

~~

til

4:~

,aHj

I'

I:II 49 .ll9 lR l l

4 1&gt;~

Team defense
,
G

...

Hannan

Tra&lt;~

ii17

~~

Sy ~

illl

~.~

1\a(th Gal l!.1
EastPrn
Oak HiU
Soo.J th141'S1Nn

II ,!9 j 1:.!1\ 7:.JI ~ . i
Jl :m 1:11 ?l4 ffi .'l

F1 fl Pbl Avf

·12:2 ~ .9
.tl .F . ~9.;
1:1 21':' Ill .\1! 'ill
~ 1~ !r2 4fQI fi\.0

~rhforn .

I'! .l l i 1111 i!i:l li:l . ~
1.1 .l'll 171 RT. ii4 ~

Eoastl'rn .
SoJ lh"Mii'rn
Oak Hill
K \'IU'r C'r('('k

r.arua

Da k HI U

G F1 t'l ns "'·•
12 t\.1 1.11 ~ ~!+.II
\1 '!7" 101 ii\1 ~. 1

Swthf'fn

.W

.11 15 lll \\4
43 lh 102 \1 .3

G F~ Fl PtA 1\W
. !+ t7fi IOl li'W 72.7
&gt;I 1U HN ~Ill ln.:,

~t/1('\"Q

Team· defense

.....

!l
H
!l
8
J!

....

.. 12 :ME l:li 1W W.J
12 :n~ 163 799 tili.ii
12 m 1~ 1M 6."1 ..1
II 2AA Jill 70fi (,4 _2

m

~ .as1

Team offense

122 II I

I~ ll2 124 7'JI 111.7

\ 'a lk":&gt;

1!. 45 15 105 J.l.l
.rf 42 11 tO!) 131

2.1 IU 11 .3

II 2~~ 116 bH Yl .~
1.1 t10 110 1\."10 !10.0

~:o· rrmf"'

25 161 179

.9 70 14 1$.4 17.1
.A ~ !i I ~ 16.9
.A ~'i 1!1 L2!l 16.1
...!l ~ 2ll llll 15 ..1
~ H
.1.1 lll 1$1
II 411 ll 119 14 .~
!l ~ I~ Ill \U
!l :\1 Ill 12~ \JJl

Ed Collru. Eas1
Brian HOIH&gt;il. OH
Erk' Fll~' l' , OH ..

G F1 Fl Pill Aw

SaitJworn ...
Hannan Till«'

~

.Y

Rich Gilrmr£'. KC..

Team offense

....

G F1 Fl Pt.-. Aw
A fi,W, 17 U7 JM4

John Tlun~n. S\"

. .. 12 9! 19 l:ib 11.9
Rldl Gilmore. KC
. .. U e5 23 l~ IH
Ed COIIns, East .
12 :19 ~ 1.:! U 9
Brian HOM't1. OH
11 4.'1 45 131 I 1.9
John 'l'h:lmiJIOn SV ........ . ll ~ 24 121 li .J

..

the Braves and Expos, is running
tum around. We'v~ go!. two years
third . "Their presentation wasn't
left with Tampa , and a iot can
nearly as in-depth as the others,"
hap&gt;"n in two years."
Schott said .
Seek arbitration
And Tampa also remains in the
Meanwhile, eight Reds filed for
running, Schon said.
sa lary arbitration before the dead"I like Tampa. I always have."
line Wednesday at midinJght. They
she said . "But you don't know what
included pitch ers Ted Power, Joe
is going to happen with that
Price an d .John Franro , catchers
situation. They are counting on , Dave Van Gorder and Sal Butera,
expansion, and I just don '! think
outfielders Nick Esasky and Max
expansion is going to happen, not
Venable and infielder Wayne
soon anyway. "Mayhe Tampa will
Krenchicki.

January Clearance
NOW IN FULL SWING
SAVE

NOW

lJ2

PRICE

MANY NEW SHOES HAVE BEEN ADDED
TO OUR SALE TABLES - STOP IN SOON!

Valle".

.~

!Ill

~

rr.

l(l)

fl~'\1~~'J6fi l !(

~

210 ll.l

9

229Ul~t\'l~

1'1 !f)

K.\ 'l'f'r Crf"('k ,

~ro

6.U

Mi \"&gt;1 I!H

"The Middle Shoe Store In The Middle Blo1k"

EAST MEIGS - Placing illree
women in the scor!Itg column, the
Eastern Eaglettes stormed to a
53-45 SV AC triumph over the North
Gallla Lady Pirates to remain tied
lor top league spot at 8-l. Seniors
Amy Young and Margaret Homer
tossed in 22 and 14 points respectively, while ju nlor Lesa Rucker
knotted 10.
Eastern Is now 8-4 overall and
tied with Oak Hill tor the SVAC
lead, while North Gallla drops to &amp;-3
in the league.
The Eaglettes of Cooc h Pam
Douthitt sprinted to a 1Hllead in
the opening stanza, then opened up
a ~20 lead at the half.
A hard ·fought third period
matched Inside games with Eastern's Amy Young and North
Gallla 's Jayne Campbell, who
traded buckets at a rapid clip.
When the dust had settled, both
clubs had battled to a 1J.tldeadk&gt;ck
within the frame lor a 39-13 score.
Despite a good Pirate effort ,
Eastern roared on to the 53-45 win .
Marga ret Horner not only played a
good Inside game, but led the team
with 9 rebounds , Young and Rucker
added six each, Arlene Ritchie
added 4, and Eev Wigal two .
Eastern hit 25 or 52 from the Roor
lor a warm 48 perrent, while hitting
3 or 12 at the line.
Besides fine oftenslve efforts
from Young, Horner, and Rucker,
Beverly Wigal added 5, and Tonya
Savoy 2.
Jayne Campbell led NG with 23
markers. while talented point
guard Michele Geor~ was held to
just 14 points. Sheila RaUHI added 6
and Usa Lemaster 6.
Coach Pam Douthitt noted, "We
accomplished our goal of holding
Michele George below her average.
I thought we played well offen sively, although we could have been
more selective late In the game.
Amy (Young! and Margaret
(Horner! played well underneath

and Bev Wigal came off the bench
to play another fine game."
Eastern plays tonight at Hannan
Trace.

The Daily Sentinel
! USPS 145-BtO)
A. Dlvblon of MuUimedla, Inc.

POMEROY, OH.

CHECK OUR WINDOWS
FOR SALE MERCHANDISE

January Clearanee

Publish ed every afternoon, M ond a~·

Cou rt St. , Po·
by th(l Ohlo Valley Pub ·
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Pomeroy, Ohio 15769. Ph. 992-2t56. S.·
cond class postage paid al Pome roy,
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meroy, Ohio,

OF

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Member: United Press International.
Inland D a lly Press Association a.nd th{'
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NewspapeT Sal es, 733 Th ird Avenue,

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No subscriptions by mall permitted In
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Mall Sub!tcrtpllons

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13 \\r'eeks .......... .. ......... ... ......... $14.56
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52 Weeks .... O~l~i~l~· ~ ...... $58.24

On The "T" In Middlepo,t

13 Wf:&gt;eks ..
. .... $15.60
26 Weeks ............. .... ...... .. ..... S31.20
52 'W eeks ... .. .... ..... .. ......... ..... .. $59.80

Rates of Taxation for 1985
In Pursuanu of Law, I, George M. Collins. Treasurer of Meigs County, Ohio in compliance witt. revised C o d eN~. 323.08

ot Stote of Ohio, do hereby give notice of the Rates of Taxation for the Tax Year ot f985. Rates expremd rn dolla11
and cents on each one thou111nd do!lan till valuation.
TOWNSH IPS
SCH OOL DISTRICTS
AND

:
1-

•
',

CORPORATIONS

-

•

-=

BEOFORO
Meigs
Eastern

cHESTER
cOLUMBtA

Berry's World

.917
.833

SVAC Scoring

Eastern
Meig1

'

I
2
3
5
7
8
ll
12

SVAC

F'irr ProtC'C't ion Associa lion. " arro rding to Ku ssC'ruw's rrpon.

er procedures - a tank was filled be- some of their com plaints in connecyond 1ts capaCity, then hea ted in an tion wtth the company's applica ti on
open enviro nment.
· for expansion of the Sequoyah plant.
NACE and other grass-roots groups
Thai hearing was sc heduled for earwere repeated ly rebuffed by both the ly Jan uary - but was postponed in·
NRC and Kerr-McGee when they chal- definitely when the tank ruptured and
lenged various practices at the facili- r eleased the corrosive. radioactive
ty. but the NHC finally agreed to hear gas three davs ear l ier .

Eastern .. .... .... ........ ... 3 6 .333
Synunes Valley . . . .. .. . 3 6 .333
Southwestern ....... ... .. 1 8 .Ill •
Kyger Creek ....... .... ... 0 8 .OOJ
Tuesday's results
North Gallla 53 Eastern 50
Southern 92 Kyger Creek 37
Oak Hill 71 Southwestern 56
Hannan Trace 68 Symmes Valley 54

ALL GAMES

said Rick Nate.
Schott said she would prefer to
bulld a bond between whatever city
is chosen and the team, similar to
what the Dodgers and Vero Beach
have accomplished.
"We are not looking at this as
what's best fort he Reds, but what's
hest for the Reds and the city we
decide on. The Dodgers have a
marriage with Vera Beach. That's
what we would like. ! told everyone
we talked to this would take some
tinne -.two to four months at the
very least," Schott said.
On paper, It appears Port St.
Lucie, In St. Lucie County near Fort
Pierce. ts offering the mosl attractive site. The city Is planning a
$6-mllllon project with a 5,000-seat
stadium, but so far, only roads to
the romplex have been buUt.
Port St. Lucie's major drawback
is its remote location from other
spring training sites. The Reds
would routinely face a two· hour bus
ride to away games.
Pompano, on tbe other hand,
offers lour other teams within a
J:l·minute ride but a facility one
chamber of commerce member
described as "fit for a high school
team, at best."
Apparently West Palm Beach.
which already Is the spring home to

l Eaglettes defeat Lady Pirates MARGUERITE SHOES

SVAC standings

J ay ao.tll'k. ~ ....

Nuclear dangers________R_o_be_rt_~_a_lters_

Feels people shafted again

fur council

CINCINNATI (UPII - The
question or whether this will be the
final Iinne the Reds report to
Tampa, Fla .. for spring training Is
unresolved as the team prepares to
head south In five weeks.
The Reds have trained In Tampa
for the past 50 years and are under
contract with the Tampa Sports
Authority through the sprtng of
1987. But Tampa 's efforts to attract
a major league team of Its own has
sent Reds' management on a
scouting trip of cities.
Three Florida cities are courting
the Reds - Pompano Beach, Port
St. Lurie and West Palm Beach all 9f which are located on the
state's eastern coast. Owner Marge
Schott and Genl,'ral Manager 1'\~1
Eergesch last week toured tne1
prospective cities, and Eergesch Is
scheduled to meet with representatives ri. eachduringspringtralnlng.
"Everybody want the Reds,"
Schott said, "and everybody has
been very nice . It makes this
decision all the more dlffieult."
A spokesman for the Tampa
Sports Authortty said there is a
strong possibility 198&gt; will be the
Reds' last season in Tampa.
"Officially, we are prepared for
the Reds to be here In 1986. After
that, ll' s very much up In the air,"

Page- 2'- The Deily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Shultz at PEN---,---______w_i~llia_n_lF_.B_u_ck_ley_J_r.

The D!!!~rt~:?till(l

Sentinei-Page-3

The

Three Florida cities court Reds' owner

Commentary

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

0

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4.30 1.70 24.00 .40 .10 t.OO
4JO uo 25.00 .40 .10 1.00

1.00
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1.50 1.00 .035 t03
t .50 1.00 .034154

.019517 36 .00
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4.30 3.00 25.00 .40 .10 t.OO
4.30 3.00 14.00 .40 .tO 1.00
4.30 2.70 28.10 .40 .10 1.00 3.50

1.00 1.50 1.00 .043858
1.00 1.50 1.00 .045034
2.00 1.50 1.00 .242611

.026348 38.30
.027055 3730
.200111 44.60

l EBANON

4.30
4.30
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4.30
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4.30
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4.30
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4.30
RUTLAND
RUTLAND VILLAGE 4.30
. 4.3D
sALEM
4.30
sALIS8URY
MIDDLEPORT VtlLAGE4.30
POMEROY VILLAGE 4.30
4.30
SCIPIO
4.30
sun oN
4.30
RACINE VILLAGE
SYRACUSEVILLAGE 4.30
SUTTON
uo
Meigs
Eanem

3.70
3.70
410
3.70
3.50
2.30
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1.10
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.20
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25.00
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24.00
24.00
24.00
14.00
24.00
24.00
14.00
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23.50
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3.10 24.00

.40
.40
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.40
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.40
.40
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1.00 .051393 .027993
1.00 .0489tt .031167
1.00 .04 t 192 .028118
1.00 .041078 .024557
1.00 .079918 .037386
1.00 .035103 .Ot952l
1.00 .035103 .019527
1.00 .066419 .044112
1.00 .071432 . .052635
1.00 .033699 .022468
1.00 .044040 .01905 t
1.00 .t t9760 .063t65
1.00 .048485 .011933

!.50 1.00 .051121

2.00
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1.50
1.50
t.50
f.50
1.50
t.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.&amp;0
1.50
1.50

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38.80
36.60
42.30
36.00
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43.20
40.30
37.50
36.90
44 .t0
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THE MOTOR PARTS tr:~.

cent. Taxes may be paid at the office of the county treuw-er or by mail. PleaM&gt; bring your last tax rece ipt, md lf you pay by mail be aure to locate your property by. taxing district and enclose stamped &amp;Clf·
addreued envelope.

446·2962

·

Always examine your tax receipt to see thai it coven 1111 your property. Office Houn 8:30 A.M. to
4:30P.M., Monday tnru Friday, Closed on SaturdJy,

Gallipolis, OH

992·2131

Middleport, OH

GEORGE M. COL LINS, Meigs CoWlty Treasurer
" If you don ·r lig ht that crgar, I won 't frghf fill s.
Molot ov cocktail. ..

,.

..

·~

�Thursday, January 16, 1986

P•-4-The Daily Sentinel

Greenfield
fifth in AA

Ball State, Miami
Share MAC ·lead
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
The three-way tie in the MidAmerican Conference was reduced
to two Wednesday night and, when
the smoke clears after Saturday 's
set of games, there wW he a lone
king of the hlllin the MAC.
Ball State and Miami now share
the league's top spot after the
Cardinals beat Ohio University ,
77-73, and Miami downed Kent
State, 58-51, Wednesday night .It left
both teams, who meet Saturday,
with 4-1 league r€COrds.
OU, which had been tied for the
lead, dropped to 3-2 with its Sl'COnd
consecutive loss.
As usual. it was Ron Harper who
led the way for Miami. Tht&gt; 6-foot -6
senior had T/ points, 12 rebounds
and five steals. He scored eight
points as the Redskins turned a
31-30 lead into a 42-35 margin with
12-4 run midway through the second
half. Alter that. Kent never got
closer than rJve points.
"Harper played another great
game," said Miami Coach Jerry
Pelr!l:ln. "It was a fine win over a
good team . Kent is very dangerous.
even though their record doesn't
reflect Ihat.
Peir!IJn said he looked for "a real
shootout Saturday . It 's a sellout
over there !Muncie. lnd.l a nd when
the conference co-leaders go headto-head, it makes for rea l interestIng play."
At Athens. Dan Palombizlo and
Marx Clark Jed the way for Ball
State with 21 and 20 points,
respectively.
OU mice built comfortable margins. 25-10 in the first h a ~ and 48-40
in the second. but both times
couldn ·1 hold on.
Tht&gt; Cardi nals took the lead for
good on a basket by Jon Luedke
with 2:40 to play.
"We went from man-to-man to a
zone from a tempo standpoint. "
said BaU State Coach Al Brown .
"becauSt&gt; dhio U got out oo quickly.
The zone helped us get back down
the rJoor better. Also , becauSt&gt; Ohio
is a heller outside shooting team
than In recent years."
John Rhodes sm!'!'d 18 points,
Dave J amerson 17 and Paul Baron
15 for the Booc ats.
In other MAC games Wednesday
night , Bowling Green won its third
In a row wit h a i3-72 decision over
Eastern Michigan. Central Michl ·

gan downed Toledo 79-ffi and
Western Michlgan knoCked off
Northern Illinois 82-76.
Brian Miller scored 27 points,
Including the final three of the game
with 29 seconds to play in B:; 's win
over Eastern Michigan.
With Eastern up 72-70, MUier
drove the baseline and scored on a
reverse layup, drawing a foul in the ·
p!'OCI'ss and sinking the frff' throw.
Jim Snntth scored 19 points, Steve
Martenet 14 and Bob Nass 11 for the
Falcons.
At Mount Pleasant, Mich., Dan
Majerle scored 22 points and Ervin
Leavy added 20 to pace Central
Michigan to victory over Toledo.
Central had a 3!1-25 halttime lead
and graduaJJy buUt it throughout
the second ha~. Andy Fisher and
Bob Borcherdt led Toledo "i th 14
point s api€Ce.
Cleveland State, behind Ken
McFadden 's 26 points, surprised
DePaul 90-75 at the Horizon in
RoSt&gt;mom, Ill.
The Blue Demons jumped to a
22-12 ~ad In the first 12 minutes of
the game, but the Vikings came
back behind McFadden's 13 first ·
ha~ points.
Clevf'iand State broke a ll-39 tie
on a basket by Ed Bl)'ant with 16
minutes left , tlx'n ran d!lOstmight
points to go ahead 57-45 wit h lO
minutes to play .
,,
Clinton Smith had 18 points.
Clinton Ran.sey 15 and Bob Craw ....., .1\i:
'
..
ford 11 for the Vikings.
Sixth-ranked Memphis State, behind William Bedford's 23 points,
rolled to an ffi-71 Metro Conference
\1CIOIJ' over Cincinnati.
Cincinnati was paced by RomeJI
Shorter with lJ points, while Roger
McClendon and Joe Stiffend added
14 api€Ce for the B&gt;arca ts. Memphis State led 39-24 at h~time .
In Ohio Athlet Jc Confel'l'nce
act ion. it was Heidelberg over
Baldwin-WaUace 58-54, Muskin
gum over Capital 57-49. Otterbein
over Mount Union 94-ffi, and
Wittenberg over Ohio Northern
40-32.
in other Wronesday night games,
Indiana edged Ohio State 69-66 ,
SCOOP SH&lt;YI' - Indiana guard Winston Morgan
outstretched anns of Ohio st. forward Brad Sellers
Wright Sta te hea t MariOn tlnd .]
1right) atrempls lo a scoop shot under the
(left) during first half action Wednesday night.
117-81, Ohto Wesleyan beat Wooster
73-66. Defiance ou tsrored Bluffton
100- 77, Wilmington defeated Han·
over tlnd.J 77-72, Carnegie-Mellon
1Pa.l won over John Carroll 61 - 58, •
By GERRY MONIGAN
The Hoyas trailed by a many as 7 No. 8 Kansas topped t'Jebraska
and Findlay tripped Manchester
UPI Sport.• Writer
points in the first half- before 81-70; No. 9 St. John's dominated
1Jnd .i 73-62
Grorgetown has taken a giant sutglng midway through the second 51-ton Hall 74· 58, No. 11 Kentucky
step !rom beneath Pal tick Ewing's half.
stopped Mississippi State 61-52; and
Georgetown raised its r€COrd to No. 18 Louisville outlasted Florida
shadow .
Alter each of the Hoyas' thrP&lt;' 12-3. 3·2 in the Btg East. Syracuse State 115-64.
losst'S this season. the hall' in dropped to 13-1 and 4- 1.
At Cincinnati, William Bedford
Grorgetown's
middle
created
by
Wendell
Alexis
added
15
and
scored
23 points to pace Memphis
an d leading all SCOTt'rs "1th 32
graduatiOn
appeared
inDway
ne
Was
hington
13
for
State
past
Cincinna ti In a Metro
Ewing's
point s. Junior center Dal)'l Thomas
Conference vic lory. Memphis
retumed to the tineup after sitting cl'!'asingly la rgl'r. It took six Syracuse.
Williams convl'rted on an a !ley- State, 16-0 and 3-0 In the oonference,
out three games and scored 15 players, but last night at the Capital
center.
II
was
filled.
oop
with 19 SPConds left for a 71 -70 tied a school record with Its 16th
points. He led Indiana in reboundBehind David Wingate's 18 lead. Alexis responded with a straight triumph . Dwight Boyd
ing wit h eight. Calloway added 14
point s, ReggiO" William s' 17. and
rebound basket wit h four SE'COnds added 15 points, Vince Askew 14.
points.
Andre Turner scored 13, and
For Ohio State, senior forward strong suppor1ing performances bv left to cui the lead to 71·70.
Wingate hit two foul shots with Dewayne Bailey 10.
Brad 51-llers played up to the bllting Ra lph Dalton. Grady Mateen,
two seconds left to prov ide the fina l
At Boulder, Colo. , 11m McCalisBuckeye coach Eldon MUJer gave Jonathan Edwards and Ron niP
Highsmith. No. 16 Grorgetown
margin.
ter scored 27 points, and Darryl
him.
In other games in volv ing Top 20 Kennedy added 23 to 111ceunheaten
" In my opinion, he is one of the handed No. 4 SyracuSt&gt; its first loss
trams, No . 6 Memphis Sta te Oklahoma over Colorado In the
best big players in the oountry, of the St&gt;ason. 73-70 in a Big East
whipped Cincinnati B!i-71; No. 7 Buffaloes' Big Eight Conference
showdo"n.
\\i thout questiOn." Miller said.
"Coach 1John 1 Thompson Oklahoma downed Colorado 9l -82; opener. The \1ctoty boosted Okla ·
51-Uers led Ohio State with 29
points. including 20 In the second worked the big ml'n hard this
week." Dalton said. "WhE'n Patrick
h a~ . He also grabbed 16 rebounds.
to increase his nation-leading aver- was here. we had a strong inside
game, and .. ''li!IN4~u e to
age of 14 .1 rebounds per game.
Ohio Sta te got of! to a slow start, count on at.
Sy rae ·s Rafael Addison , who
something that ha s plagued the
Buckeyes aJJ St&gt;ason. They were Jed the rangemen with 16 po ints.
behind by as many as 12 points in recognized the Ho)·as Inside
domina lion.
the first half .
"I think their big people pla:·ed
"It was a typical game for us. up
and down in the same ga me," well inside - thev took the ball
Miller said. "It is a lillie frustrating strong 10 the basket and scored ." he
to me. I'm not surewp have realized said .
how good we can bo."
indiana took charge r:i the game
Girls ralings
earl)' with a 12-.1 run midway
('(1 1 \ ~ 11 '&lt;.,
t \"\'1
- 1111' "' ~ ...,,
through the first ha~ . That spun
l ll llf•tl f' n"'~ lnkr l\! 1,,1'1..1 11hl" flit.:~
gave the Hoosiers a 27 151ead with
Srl'll•~ lhol\1 " ' ( 'n., whr'
~1rl• IIJ&lt; kc •lh. ol'
1: ollf\L"' oU.IIh lll"T pl.rn• •, till" . wd ,., .,,
7:27 left In the ha ~ .
'""' ·oull'l h m ~· •• • ·ntllr•• "'
Though Ohio State was down
\,\;\
l'uinh
:19-ll at half, the Buckeyes got to
lh:
I l'll'k• ·• m~~''" •11'• o)l o) ,
wlthln three points In less than one
~~ ~
t'o nt1nf\.oll..., 'loon , lllh
1!7
minute of the srcond h a ~ .
I I nlumnu .. t lrro o ~ h. o \ l 'rl ' • II''

-

BLOOMINGTON. Ind. tUPIJIndiana and Ohio Sla te both played
like thev wanted to.
Indi ana shot well from the
ou tslde and played excellent defen se. Ohio Sta te rebounded well
and was able to get some easy shots
of! of its o.,.,'ll misses.
But the Hoosiers had one ad,·an tage over the Buckeyes Wednesda)·
night. Clutch free throw shooting in
thP final minute of pia)· gave
Indiana a 6%6 Big Ten baskelball
victory.
The Hoosiers hit fi\·e of m free
throws In the final32seconds to seat
the win . Two of them came from
frPshman forward Ricky Calloway.
"The biggPsl play for us was
probably the two free throws
Cal lowav made." said indiana
coach sOb Knight . "That's awfuUy
good for a freshman m do ...
Callowa)· said those were the
bigges t frN' 1hrows he has ever
shot. " I \\',!&gt; netYous. but I had to
shoot them Jn)·" ·ay I just told
my self to knock them down ."
And knoc k lhem d0\\11 he did .
.Junior 1'\JUI'd Steve i\lford also hit
thrtt' In'&lt;' lhrows in the final 1.1
seconds.
Indiana impmved tis record toJ-2
in the Big Ten a nd 11-4 owra ll Ohio
State fell to .1-2 in the conference and
9-5 overall.
Alford

\~ ;p..

lhr krv to Indiana 's

offf•nsc. ronn!'cling on 1:2 of Jl shots

Centrai-How~r .

Rounding ou t the AA top 10 was
former Marauder Rick Va n Ma ll'l''s Greenfield McCla in Tigers
who took fifth, followed by Oberlin.
the Cincinnati Academy of Physical EducatiOn (CAPE), Bedford
Chane!, Orrville and Youngstown
Rayen. CAPE is the only newcomer, repla cing New Concord John
Glenn.
The Eagles, with nine firsts,
finished a solid second wi Ih 281
points, bu I can expect a sudden
drop In their stock after a 61 -55 loss
to Canton McKinley Tuesday night
that left them with a 10·1 record .
That came on the heels of a 66-64
overllml' win over Clcvrtand St.
Ignatius on Saturday.
Barberton. now I HI after a 117-66
win over Ravenna Friday night.
wound up third for the second week
in row with 216 poinls, aga in
finishing just ahead of Kl'llering
Alter (9-11, which had 2m.
Mansfield 51-nior 110-11 jumped
fiVm ninth into thr No. 5 spot thls
week, foUowed In order by Clncin·
nail St. Xavier, Davton Dunbar,
Toledo St. Francis, Lorain Admira l
King and Cincinnati Pu rcell
Marian .
St. Francis jumped all the way
fmm 13th to eighth , while King
moved up from lith to ninth . Mt.
Healthy and Toledo &amp;ott dropped
out .
Willard t12-0i and Ottawa- Glan·
dorf (10-01 continued to wage their
2-team ba ttle for the :-Jo. I AA
rating, although the Crimson
Flashes still hold a comfortable
50-point margin, ll\-288.

GALLIPOLIS AND POMEROY

JAN. 13TH TH RU JAN. 18TH

~

Will induct 9 ex-players into
Marshall's Hall of Fame
played for Marshall 's 194i NA IB
1NA IA 1 national champiOns , also
will be inducted.
Other Inductees Include Yost
Cunningham &gt;Of Elkins, now of
Myr1le Beach, S.C., 1940; Lewis
Wilcox of Huntington. 19:§!; Bob
Koontz of Huntington , now of
Melbourne. Fla .. 1950: and Tom
Langfitt of Washington . Pa .. now or
Myrtle Beach, S.C.. 1966.
Th ~ Hall or Fa me inductiOn wUJ
he held at a banqul'l at 6: lJ p.m.
Friday In the MarshaU Memorial
Student Center. Advance reserva tions for the banquet can he made
by caUing the MarshaU Big Geeen
&amp;holarshlp Foundation at 1304)

696-5407. .
&lt;
The nl'W inductees will be
Introduced at halftime of The
Citadel-Marshall game at 12:30
p.m. Saturday . .
Thls SE'Cond class of basketball
Inductees wUJ make 20 players in
the basketball section of the
Marshall Athletic Hall of Fame.
The footbaJI section has 22
members.

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\:11

RED TAG GIFT WARE
REDUCED

20°/o

to

•COLLECTORS PLATES •DOLLS
•CHINA
•BEARS
•GLASSWARE
•WOOD
•CLOCKS
•SILVER·

60°/o
•VILLAGE STONEWARE !Gallipolis)
•YORKTOWN (Gallipolis!
•FOSTORIA STEMWARE
•GREAT SELECTION

HURRV IN TODAV AND SEE WHAT'S ON SALE

~~

Ill
Ill
+I

.ll
I'

Srrond nJnro· 12 f'ot, l .flrJm ~ · \.1 u
•llr l Luca~ and llurkf')·f' 1'raU . ll f'll("lt
l:'i . Butk~'f' W~t ~; Iii Hoc-kiOrd
Par l!way :M . 1i Uil' l ScK.Ith Rill111' and

Gllrroor Acadrlll)' . 22 ('Q('h: 19 DrGra!t
RNrrsldc, 'J); al. Fort H.I'('()\'My li

WE WILL SOON BE GOING TO THE GIFT MARKET TO BUY
NEW GIFT WARE. SO WE'RE REDUCING MANY ITEMS
NOW IN STOCK. THE REDUCED ITEMS ARE MARKED WlfH
ARED TAG. SO IF YOU'VE B.EEN LOOKING, COME IN NOW
AND SEE WHAT'S ON SALE.

113 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OH.

992 -2054

Your Proje3sionol
Full Service Jeweler

342 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
446-2691

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S ·

Chancey could establish new scoring record
ROCK SPRINGS - The number
one scorer in Meigs cage history
could change. hands here Friday
when the unbeaten Marauders try
to make Vinton County their 14th
straight victim in TVC boys'
basketball action.
Tonight, Coach Ron Logan' s
onc!'beatl'n Marauderettes host
Nei!IJnvU!e-York, who handed the
Meigs ladles their only loss of the
season, 39-37, earlier In the year.
51-nior Mike Chancey needs 18
points to brPak the current career
school scoring mark of WJ points
held by Nick Riggs, a 1981 MHS
graduate. Chancey, thl' TVC's
MVP as a junior last Sl'ason and
all-district St&gt;lection. earlier this
season became the school's most
prolific career rebounder.
Vinton County brings a 4-7 record
to Larry Morrison Gymnasium
including a 4-6 TVC mark, good for
sixth place. Meigs has a comfortable two-game edge over 9-2 Warren
Local with a U-0 mark.
In the first meeting, Coach Greg
Drummer's Marauders came
away from McArthur with a tight

Drummer oonslders his bench
the biggest strength his ball club
has and Its' no small wonder with
fine athletes such as J. R. Kitchen ,
Huey Eason, and Donnie BeckN to
fill in. Guards Chris Kennedy and
Phil King also Jog early playing
time.
Face I~ Bud&lt; eyes
In the girls' game tonight, the
Marauderelles will attempt to stay
tied with Alexander for the leagul'
lead, but that will be no small task
against the Lady Buckeyes. The

performers last year.
Joining the MUiers in the Marauderett e starling line- up are
mistake-proof two-year starter Jodi
Harrison and juniors Jenny Swartz
and Jenni Couch. Swartz and
Couch both have hem Meigs'
leading scorers in games this year.
Bench power is supplied by Tammy
Wright .. Teresa Johnson, Maria
Mussl'r, Shelly Stobart, and Lisa
PuUins.
In reserve battles, the Meigs boys
are leadlngthe TVC racebyagame

overall and 10-1in the league, ahead
of 8-2 ·Belpre. Starters fo r the Little
Marauders Include Chris Smith.
Mike Bart rum, Scott Wiltiams, Don
Dorst, and Bill Brothers with Joe
Snyder and Robb Harrison filling in
early.
The Meigs gir ls' reserves have
improved to 7-4 on the year aft er a
slow start. Leading the Lillie
Marauderettes inc ludl' Mi ssi
Woods, Nancy Blankenship, Nikki
Whitlatch, Leslie Carr, El(&gt;th Ewing, Rhonda Zirkle, and Dee

726
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r:==========:;-1

ITVC standings... I
. ....... 9 3 816
.. ...... R 3 Ta;
i
5 8:W.
A"'"'nde'
. G G RIO
Fedrrai·HOCk lnfl!: .. ..
. -1 7 684
Vtn1on Counry ....
. 4
· 7 ~
2 9 ,..... ,
Wt&gt;Jlston .
Mlllrr ...
. ..... 2 9 5ffi
Nr lson\111~ York ...
2 10 IRl

"Wa Do It All"

SAYS ...

A~AERJCA N IIJl'JI~GREETINGS
~,

of the 1983-84 season when thE'y
were beaten at home by Warren Local. Warren Local wentll-0 that
year and handed Meigs three of it s'
six losses. Meigs was 16-1&gt; IMI yl'ar.
All-TVC performer Amy Dixon
leads the Lady Buckeyes while the
Marauderettes' big guns , Julie and
Jenny Miller, could spell doubl!'
trouble for NYHS. The twin-sisters
were both aU-TVC and all-district

American Gree1ings with Rose designt© MCMlXXX IV American Greetings Corp .

Ziggy&lt;'

.

I WHI'PeD Ull

© MCMLXXX IV Universal Press Syndtcate

ACAKe b Sei\D
yO,) FOR '(OIJR
8il\lHQI!f...

SCHOOL

&amp; tp.-. .. .. ..
Trtmblr . . .. .. . ..

~.!J

MR. AUTO REPAIR

•

CHRISTIAN

Warren Local .

·

B01

M-*m~arP»l -mll ~f~an~d~a~M~~~o~~~r~Be~·~lp~r~e;.~M~e~ig~s~is~D~l~~H~c~~~c~r~so~n~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~T~n~·~~~T~7~~~~~~~~~R~A~C~I~N~E~.~D~H~.~~~

THE GALLIA

ALL G&gt;\MES
TEAM
W L PI'S OI'P
Mol)&lt;s .. .. .. . .. , .. .. .. .. ........ 13 0 ~ll m9

THE GINGERBREA~

9-1 in the loop.
The Meigs ladies havl' an 18game home winning streak on the
line, dating back to the early portion

56-54 win. Chancey had a field day
against the shorter Vlkings with 26 I ·
points and 20 rebounds. Junior
&amp;ott Gilliland, who had 10 points in
the first game, is the Vikings' tallest
player at 6-2.
Tied for 13th
The Marauders were tied for 13th
located at Cheshire, Oh.
with Orrville in the latest AP class
has
requested from-the Ohio
AA state ran kings and missed
Dept.
of Education aJlllfOVal
entering the top ten by a single
to
operate
and a charter.
point. The lOth. 11th, and 12th spots
Any
person
having knowlwl're tied with 22 points while Meigs
edge
of
racial
discrimination
had 21.
practices in the recruitment
51-nior guard Rick Wise continues
of students, admission,
to be Meigs' Jeadirlg scorer on the
employment, scholarships,
season with a 19.0 average. Wise's
loans, fee waivers, educa·
deadly shooting eye has always
tiona! programs, athletic or
been around, but his passing game
extra curricular activities
&lt;1 late is a major reason for the
should contact The Division
Marauders' success.
of Equal Education OpporBrad Robinson joins Wise at
tunity, 65 So. Front St.,
guard to give MHS one of the
Room 413, Columbus, Oh.
quickest backcourt s in southeast43215. Tal. 11614-466 -,
ern Ohio. Shawn Ba ker, always
3318.
capa ble of double figu res, joins
All complaints made will
Chancey at forwa rd. Lee Powell
be investigated prior to the iscomes &lt;if a 14-point performance in
suance of approval to operMeigs'.77-50 romp over Nelsonvilleate or charter to said school.
York Tuesday and at 6-6, could be a
main cog aga inst the short Vikings
Friday.

,-.--- -··-------·- -------·-·-,I

I
I
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K11omnh M cCul lough. R.Ph _
Ch1rtu R iffle A Ph
Ronald Hll'lol'lg . R Ph
M on lhru 51! 8 00 11 m 10 9 p m

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Suml~tv1 030to12l0e od&lt;51 o 9pm

'

PRESCRIPTI ONS

'

1{

I

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PH 992 -2 955 '

Froendl y Se rvoce

Po meo oy. Oh

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____ -----------------t
M aon

,

Opo~n Noghll Iii 9

SAVINGS OPPORTUNITY AT OUR SEMI-ANNUAL

LifestYle
FURNITURE SHOWCASE

~
1•:1

7Zl
762

TVC GAMES ONLY

W L PI'S OI'P
11 0 778 0118

TEAM

Meigs .

... 92~665
.. !1 2 tm 61.1
........ f)
4 ffi.l 636
Trlmbl£' .
A.IC')( aOdN ..
.. ....... Go 749 749
.. 4 6 009 614
Vin!Of1 Countv ..
....1 7 613
Gal
F'E'drrai·Hockin~ ...
2 !I '!l!l iU1
WPllslon .
. 2 9 6.}) ffil
Nt'lsom11k'- York ..
I 9 ,' j)J 1\&lt;1
MIIIC'r ......
.. -..... 52 ~2 lffi1 ti.'lfn
TOTALS

Warrm Local .
Bclprt ..

,Jan. 17 Gwnffi
Vlnlon Cnunl v a! Mf'iw;
F'edrra i · H oc kin~ at A.Wxa n&lt;Fr
Nel'\onNillf'- York al irimhlf'
Millrr al Ek&gt;lprr
W('ll.-:lon ar Wa rrt'fl lJX'al
,Jan . I~ Resulls
M&lt;'lwi 77 NdsonvUl~ York ~

Recliners

Warr('fl L.ocal 78 \ 'lmon County ::A
Ek&gt;ll&gt;rr li"i F'vdt&gt;ral·Hoeking fil
1'rlmhlf'

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Wl'll&lt;;ton ...
\"Inion Cou nf\' ..

.us

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476
'n !1)6
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... 6

Nf' lson vm~ York .... .
Millrr ...... ......... ..

REDUCED

I'I'S OI'P
~~
+10

2

... F

~':'ai-"HOCki~~·:::

Sofas,
Loveseots
•
and Sectionols by
La-Z-Boy® and Action®

W('llslon Hoi Alf')I Ander iU

TEAM
M&lt;l)&lt;s ...

RED TAG SALE

,,_

.

homa's record to 16-0. Colorado hll
62 pereent from the fleld.in the first
half to take a 45-43 ll'ad at haltti!lll'.
At Lincoln, Nl'b., Danny Manning
scored21 poinlsto leadKansasover
Nebraska In the Big Eight Con!erence opener for both teams.
Kansas, 15-2, battled back from a
37-:rl halftime deficit and ted by as
many as 12 with just onder a mi nute
left to play .
At East Rutherford, N.J . Waiter
Berry had a game- high 20 points
and. l5 rebounds, and Ron Rowan
added 15 points to lead St . John's to
a Big East triumph over&amp;&gt;ton Hall .
sending the Pirates to their sixth
straight b ss. Berry scored 12 in the
first ha lf. and St. John 's, 16-2,
movedtoall-26Jeadat halflimeen
route to Its fourth Big East ,;c tory
irl five starts.

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE

"''",,

HUt-.TlNGTOI\ . 1\'.\'a. I UP! I Nine basketball pla)ws. including
a national leader in fuul shooting,
wiiJ be Inducted into the Marshall
Unlversif,· Athletic Hall of f a me
Frida)' night.
The inductees include .John Mil·
hoan of Gallipolis. Ohio. whoSt&gt; 91
percent flw throw shooting in 1958
led the nation. Milhoan. a two ·time
AIJ-Mid American Conference selection and Marsha lr s most va lua ble player in 19ffi. has been a
teacher and coac h for 25 years at
Gall Ia Academy in Gallipolis whel'l'
he coached golf 24 years.
Price, who averaged 16 points a
ga me at Marshall , ran ks 22nd in
career scoring on 1,222 points.
Thr South Charleston pair of
Cehe Price• and Pa ul Underwood
also w!U he inducted . They helped
Marshall win the 1906 Mid Ameri ca n Co n fe t·e n cl'
c hampionship .
Price and Inductee John Watson
d Gary, Marshall class of 19ll, are
deceased .
Mervin Gutsha Uof Coalton, who

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - The
top teams l'!'malned unchanged In
the second week of the United Press
International Ohio High &amp; hool
Board of Coac hes boys basketball
ratings.
·•
Cleveland St. Joseph, Willard and
Columbus Wehrle all retained their
No. 1 ratings, with Akron CentralHewer, Ottawa-Glandorf and I;lerJin Hiland once again in the
runner-up spots.
St. Joseph, now 12-0 after a pair of
"1ns last weekend, received 22 of J7
first place votes cast by the Class
AAA coaches for 340 poll points and
a healthy lead over runnerup

Georgetown hands Syracuse first loss, 73-70

Indiana stops Bucks

Thursday, January 16, 1986

:m
499
"'
516

-t90
.f69

501:)

.j57
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.'Ill\ ill
-1596 .!596

~
~1

Beautiful Selection Of

Dinettes
REDUCED

14 lteflult!l.

MPigs ~2 Nf'lson\'lllr--York .'1}
AleKa nck'r 41 Wt'll!lton 42
VInton County 41 Warn'tl Loca l l:\
r!'df'rai·Hocking ~7 Bf'lprf' 4ft
Mlllf'r ;~ T'rim blf' J'l

Barclay,
Temple,
Fairfi.eld
ands·
1mmons
0
0

2S /o TO 7s /0 OFF
Bedding. by
Simmons and
Stearns &amp; Foster
REDUCED

UPI ratings
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I f"lr\'t•l,.nd SI. ,IOY'ph 12!1 o\201
:.! Akron t'f•nll"'oJII! O&gt;O t' ! o1h ,10 \1
:1 Rtr·tx-rton 111 t ll !l•
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~ Oi11 ton Dunbm 1 ~ - l•
R. Toi«&lt;I Sl . nanrl ~ 1 lfl 11
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n rotumbo~&gt; Plrokha''"" 'll; Jti. ~·
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1th StrM·. 0or)'IOO PA!Irnorl and Piqua .

1:.! l'a&lt;'h

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I Willord I 'Z.ll

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Polnb
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10 Younjt5 tCM·n Ril~rn •741

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10 ,Windham t 16-:l !

Reg . ' 799 .. ... .. .... ...... ...................... SALE s499 00

•Simmons flame stitch contemporary
sofa with matc hing pillows
Reg . '949 ......... ................ .......

'3990C

. SALE

• Barclay gray velvet sofa with
roll arm and 4 matching pillows
Reg . ' 599 .00 ............. ...................

~ALE '39900

·- •Te mple blue and rose trad itional
sofa with kick pleat
"Reg . ' 775 .00 .. ... .....
.... . SALE

'·

'57500

•Barclay waterfall print loose
pillow back sofa in mauve and gray
. SALE
Reg . ' 780 .00 ........ .

399on

OVER 30 SOF AS , SECTIONALS AND LOVES EATS
TO CHOOSE FROM !1

Discontinued 6edrooms

QUEEN

~ND

FULL SIZE

HIDE-A-BEDS

50°/o TO 60~/o OFF
Six New Bedroom

20°/o TO 30.0/o OFF
Solid Brass Beds

Lifestvle
FURNITURE SHOWCASE

REDUCED

CORNEA OF THIRD &amp; OLIVE - GALLIPOLIS

50°/o

OPEN DAILY TO 5 P.M.
MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY TO 8 P.M.
.

•Free Delivery •Free Parking

Polftllil I....

8. Con1~· C'rel.tvitov.• 110 I I

9. f.:-.~1 D. n1oa. t iiJ.11

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1 ~. STNI)(&gt;II\'IIil"' 2.1: 16. HNIIh 1!1; 17.
1\'llf'o.'lll' \It: IK. (tlf l llh ... and Melp. II
C'llllfl : • . 1111-1 " '.,..._n Court HouwAnd l'olont'l Crn,.1ord. 1~ 1'9£'1t

SOME MISMATCHED
AND DISCONTINUED

Traditional tight pillow back sofa, by Barclay
Herculon cover. choice of blue , grey and black
or tan , brown and black

AU IRASS. IEDS IN STOCK

.

Wher~

Cul!llomer Satil!lfart ion Is
Our
Contf'r n

· •Simmon s Queen Size Hide -A-Bed in
e blue and beige herc ulon stripe .
Reg . ' 1049 .00 ....... .... ..... .. ....... .. .. ..... SALE 159900
•Regency queen size sleep sofa
in a mauve and gray herculon with loose pillows

i

Reg . ' 837.00 .............................. .... .. SALE 14 goo
ALSO IN STOCK CHOOSE FROM 12 MORE SLEEPERS
BY STEARNS AND FOSTER AND LA -Z-BOY

ALL REDUCED !

�.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Thursday, January 16, 1986
Page- 6

Support network hires coordinator, begins class
h.•en

Pxrrrr=--cs. home hralth cnrr tffh ·
ntqups such as mo,·lng thr prrson.

extPndPd for an0thl• r· sLx monl11s
and Pam c;a rll'tso n hat. t.K'L'n hin'&lt;l

dnd cupLng wi1 h c he~n ges and dPa th .
All will b&lt;, OJl"n to anyone who is

as coordinator.

Thr Famil.v Suppon Program
initia!C&lt;I a \'C'~lr ago

has

prf'-.surl·

rnonrtonng .

in tf'rrs tPd with SIX'ci al emphasis
!x•ing 10 cncou ragl:' those with an
cldl'r l.\ Pf'J'SOn in thr hom(' who
nt'Cds !::iOmP assistnnrr with daily
liYing and might Gi l w mPt im e br
incH p,1Ci ta tf'd .
The fir•t class wil l be h~ld at I
IJ. rn on Jan ..Jl at thf' Se-nior Citizens

t'rncr·g r·ncrPs.

nlf'(ltcatJn n.

CL'nWr wil h Dr. Er nPst Sllicklin. an

~&gt;q u ipn' Pnl

rP h ~ll llliri\i'

1\'&lt;:'t~ nt!.Y :11

Mrelin_g

fh0 Senil)r

Citizens Cl'nlcr t!1t' dch·rsot:. l11.1a1·d

rcviC'wC'd

qa lu:-. of llw pro ~·Tam

thP

and mJde plJn' tu offrr four mm•r
WOrkshop~ fm f ~t rn t]~ t',IJ"t'givf' I"S .
Th(' ~rs~ion~ tu bt' offcrt""Cl H·ill bt•

on bl ood
homP

adapt in•

Ohio Uni\'ersity profl'Ssor. conduct ·
mg the session.
The other sessions will be held on
Fridays dUJing February. There ts
no charg£' for partiripatlng and all
classes are OJl"n to the public. bul
the class size will be limited.
Fut11K'r information on the programs may be obtained by calling
IlK' Center.
Currently . e\·aluation of thP
1he 11 training

effl'Ct ivrnrss of

session held last spting is underway
bv Ms. Garretson. The sessions
rimgro from the proper ways in
wltich to physica lly care for Jhe
Jl"rson and emergency procedures
to the older Jl"rson's feelings as well
as fam ily reactions and emotions .
The cost effectiveness of quality
home care versus nursing home
care is a factor ln the Family
Support Net"ork program and will
be determlncd through a study Jo be

completed by GatTetson who replace.J Noreen Ondrusko. Ondrusko
resigned this fa ll to accept other
employmenl.
One€ all of the workshops and Ihe
cost study completed , then a
training package for possible use by
other agencies will be completed.
Many of the st'Ssions have been
videotaped and will be incorporated
into the trainlng package for

osal for sta t~ and national
workshops .
The Family Suppot1 Network
project, sponsored by the Meigs
County Council on Aging and
fu nded through a federal gran t of
Sl7,508, is lntended to dNnonstrate
that a rural area ran provide a
cost-effec tive, long term health
care program for the frail elderly
with the family unit providing the

development into a generic

H omcm ~ 1ker"

.\nwric a · HomP

11f

r('('o;:.,rnitton th at ,ill incti\· idua ls ha\'P.

F:co nomrc:-. Ht'L ll fxl Or cupar irlll::-1
conllihu h'fl $1JU l tCl thr

.1~

thP farnil\ · as its cPntral foeus

Respir&lt;.llil J;. Cat t' i. ·nll l)J Ch!ldr"t•n\

llhjN'li\'e of FHA ·HE RO is to h0lp

Ho~pital. l 'u ltm JlJU '-

\ ·outh

M onc~·

mad('

L'IIIJ~r 1but rnn v..1 ...

tor thl'

b.\

\\ ho solcl
Ct"lokif'&lt;:: 1 .tml:t ·:-- .u11l nul" Slt~fl'\
Cibb~ \\ rr.., ih'' toj l ,,!],•... rn, Hl fnr tt1: ·
li r st d t~~ 1\ nl· ~ , lrl 'l~ r, !·'l,nn I " !tJp
~. tlr:-nl dii'''t'J.il l
The c h.1ph·r .!l "( ' 1 ontr dJUi t\.1 tu
thr fk:-.nu rrr l )(·\ dpm f'nt Fund
llh'rnht'I"

Which iS ll."i'tl tt .' ]iiUC iLll't ' Ffl:\
HERt ) puhli(',JJ.!ons ,nld .tl\ ,lt d 'i. fl1
conduct ..,1, 111 ' t \idPr..-:.t~:p clt'\, 'lp
n ll'nl nlf't"'llll.~S. !!ld IP dW,lH!
~ch·c· l'.1r'hip ... :1'1 nh Ul t't'd t'{hiLI
l h.ln
lltln1t' n ·· nnn~w,.Jnd I'Ci. tlt~

:n

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'1 , ii~&gt;lncll

'lit

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TIH'I'• ' ,II"!' 1illl'• ... ~.,:, f\lll~ lll•'ll.d
pill fl'i'i" 'h i~ \t·,t' ;r· .~ 1 Ht h tht
~Jp jg, I 'h, t ~J'I'I

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11t!r

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T hi' l.\111
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.\·outh orga nizat ion with

nssu mp thf:'ir rolr !' in society

r hrough

home ('f'Onomirs f'duca l ion
in dl't'l~ S of JX'rwnal growth. fn mll~'
!!ft\ \"IIC'GI Iiun.il prepor~ltion and
rc mm u nit~- in\'oln•m r nt .

F'ov nde&lt;i in

l~l5 .

the r11A has a

mrmhf'r ship of 500 ,(0)
mrn an d womrn in 12.:i00

na t1on:ll
~

nuag

chaptPrs . An~· ~ tudrnt who l'=. taking
nr h; 1~ taken :1 C'UUI 'SP in homr
("('o nn m ic~

is C'ltgible throu,gh grade

"

ThP FHA Ch apt ers place major
t'mpllasis on pmjects ln\'Olving
l'&lt;"lnsumPr rduc&lt;Jtion. hom r•mak ir.~
.lncl f.11ni l ~ LifC' rdu CJti on. C h &lt;:~ pters
.1!"n r xplo r r honw f'CO nomirs r f'l. t!rd JObs and car(l('rs w ith the&gt;

pr. \J :101t

111-:RO Chapters pi:tn• major

c:t•nt'l'.tlltln-.
.lll tnfnnn, d i,,I1

' 'm ph.tsts on prppa r ation for jobs
.J nd ca n"Prs with rf'Cogn ition th at
hun\( 1m ;lkrrs Profrssiona I homr
{ 't..'t tnumi.st s . .1lumni and olhprs rna~·
h ·corne .t~SO.'ia te:-; of FHA ThemP
" · l·' fl-\ ·HE FW Pro' idrs Tools for

t.Hl."'~-!ll&lt; ll ll

(;I 0\\ 'lh .""

'.

Tht• '-IUdt'l\1 hnd\

fJl\'_it 't · t) f

j..,'TOU,IJ H 1) 1 !11C1Udt

TURNPIKE OF GALLIPOLIS, 0.

i hf

·see ~ow

,tfld

nurnt1nn

BY RUI'H POWERS
Starting Ja n. 16, story hour will
tl' held every Thursday a I the
Meigs libraries. Olita Heigh ton will
tl' the sloryteller and she will
alternate the storv hour between
the Pome roy and Mid dl eport
libraries.
A schedule for each library will
tl' posted in the library . The lime
wtll tl' 2 p.m. and all pre-school
chlidren are Invited to attend. The
gracious ladies from !he R.S.V.P.
program of tl'&lt;&gt; Senior Citizens have
agreed to have a sJory hour on one
Wednesday of every month.
The IRS has fllmlshed the Meigs
Libraries with a variety of materials to help taxpayers prepare
their fecterall ncome tax forms. The
p:Jpular and commonly used tax
forms and schedules can be
obta ined from the library, as well
as some of tl'&lt;&gt; more hard to fi nd
for ms.

REGISTER TO WIN A NEW FORD TAURUS AT

ll".llhHl,l: 1(\" n :-.

... ,•] ! lfl'.n.:t

aboul

fltnt ~... r \ I' - ' •'{'t: ,l(l\ t~n ~:.
prnl!: .1m - 1 niph.t~L'P" r.· \' !£\'
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l'l' l~

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lht· :\I f' I,!.!' l ·h. qJ 1 f'r . .

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'::IJI lll C to~.SON PIKE ·RT 35 WEST

J'f('f'Tl II\ !1 t d t•t , "'Ill HlP "LI''C'f'p II hi liT\

Phor&gt;e 44-6 . 4524

to . . rt'f'&lt;:.stul ..;Jt u.t 1 1on -: ,md thrn
inft1tT~I.l110il \\ t.., pr 'tdr\i on hm ~ 'll
d(\ 11 \1. dl1 pP•blt·m:Tht' \1, 1:..:' ( t1.u,•, 1 1 1.., \\t·l~
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ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE FINANCING NOW AVAILABLE ON

•'~'idlt'l

\.,\~

i·~t't '!lJ

n1'

eFORD TEMPO
e MERCURY. LYNX
e MERCURY TOPAZ
(With Manual Trans.)
(With Manual Trans.)
e F-150 4X2 PICKUPS
4X2 PICKUPS
e V-6 COUGAR ' e RANGER
e V-6 THUNDERBIRD
(Excluding "S" Models)

f!'t ' I

n, ''.

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e FORD ESCORT

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HURRY LIMITED TIME OFFER

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•w tn ner will have use of car for 12 rnonths or 15,000 miles rt etigibility requirements c;., be mar.

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... rudt~nr
pi.Hi!!TIH.:

" •ii\ :dd 1 1 tnd
1
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;..,,t: 1)1: ,I pt~J]IJ
t:'

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t't1Hif1.t·i,

,1

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..... • '· E·

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~',', ~L--:1: 0
\JI"' , . ~'•'•

1980 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO

1984 VOLKSWAGEN
JETTA GLI

2 "'"' coope 6 cyl,"' cood . Vl!lytroot, auto.

4 &lt;llors. !&lt;dan. lmnt wre.t drive, 4 cyl.. a1r
cond., stJnd trans., 5 SO&lt;Ed. /111 /FM r!d~.
st..eo tape_ radtal tires, bucket seats. teat
window defog. !liiUI!"" tna1t wi'eels. H.O. eng
Stoclt! 62101.

\

lllt' lnt/.ll!n 10

trans. PS. PB. PW. jXIWer seat~ IXIW .. &lt;llor
kld&lt;s. In wl'eel. cnH
st IM /fM ro&gt;o, steroo

CLOSE-OUTS
SAVE

30°/o

ofF

to

40°/o

~~~
.

SAVE
2 tiTER

99 (

30°/o to 40°/o

.

WAS

WAS

5195

5

8195

5

1981 CHRYSLER
CORDOBA
2 dim. 1\ard lop. 6 cyt , atr cood . auto. tra"'-.
PS, PR M1 r!do. r.td~l flrll&lt;. wllte .mts,
l!Jdtl!l ""'" smelt i 51 B02
WAS
NOW

4695

5

3695

5

2 &lt;blr&gt;, sedan. lmnt wheel dnve 4 cyl. auto.
trans. PS. PB. tit wre.t. cruoe. AM/FM ri&lt;lio,
r!dtall.., bucltet S0114. Stnck # 649Jl

WAS

NOW

8195

5

1983
PICKUP

PS. PR trl wteel. cruoe_ /111/FM rad~. st..eo
tape "dto Ires, whne walls. 45.000 miles.
Stoclt! 65222

"!AS

7195 $4695

WAS

8995

5

NlMI

7195

5

1978 PONTIAC
LEMANS

,

VILLAGE PHARMACY '
MIDDl£PORT, 01!10

wor k ou ts ide more than women.

Among youngsters , 10 to H-yearold boys are nine tlmes more likely

ence intense shivering and see m
disoriented . Coordination is poor,
pulse is weak or irregular, and
brea thing is slow. The puplls of
the eye may also be dil ated and
the skin blue or puffy.
Unfort un ately, these signs can
be caused by other Illnesses as
well. Therefore, the best way to
diagnose hypo thermia is by taking the person's Iemperal ure
recta lly. A temperature of 95
degrees Is an alar m for immedl-

If you determine II'&lt;&gt; Jl"rson is
hyp:Jthermic, wra p him in blankels, and use hot water bottles to
wa rm him. Don't give him any stlmulanls , Including alcohol, for this
causes' the body to lose heat rather
than retain it . Take tl'o&gt; Jl"rsOn 1mmedia ley to the emergency room.
Hypo ther mia is a s,.-ious but
preventable condition. Make sure
you and your loved ones, young
and old, are always well protected against cold temperatures

ate action .

in winter.

4 dooo. sedan. V-8. auto "'"'· PS, PB, radial
tires. \\liite walls. Stnck i 21032.

WAS

3295

1980 CHRYSLER
leBA RON

1984 FORD F-150
PICKUP
6 c~., stand tans , PS. "dtal ttres,

2 tkm. nard fOil. 6cyt.. '" cml. auto. trans ..
PS. Pa r.tdiat ~res. whie walls. S1Dcl163381

WAS

$7995 4395
5

NlMI

3395
'

5

URNPIK
FORMERLY RIVERSIDE MOTORS

@tfllf)[JJ!ll8ATTERIES

YOUR COLD WEATHER

HAND CLEANER
ld

~

lln

picl&lt;up, short wheel ~a ''" sill&gt; burw.
Stoclt I 6400 I

WAS

8595

5

NOW

7495

5

446-iSOO
195 Upper River Road
Galhpolis, Ohio

S29?x~

tOMONid

oz

(;U&lt;dJA~Itl

Freedom Batteries

$3 Sr?i~11 $42~~AII
Jr 71f. SO

Ma1ntenance-free. never·

C!b , SOI
0761· 101

add·wa ter. no·worry

070 -101

banenes.

•

#ll -SO
CI4 -SO

Avatlable tn side alld toppost terminals

Grange meets
An exchange of homemade valentines was planned for the February l'llf'f'tlngwhen the Rock Springs
Grange met Thursday night at the
hall.
Pa t Holter gave the legislative
report and Harold Blackston rep:Jrted on community projects of
1he grange. Thank you notes were
read from Ruth Ann Fry, Lottie
Leonard and the family of James
Euler. Sympathy was extended to
Charles Kuhl and Ada Holter and
family .
Linda Brc:xlerlck gavl' the program which included readings on
the New Year, a conlest on
ritual ism was conducted, tips on
staying hea lthy were given and
there was a reading, "Mc:xlern Day
Grandma ."
Re-freshment s were served by
Mr. and Mrs. William Grueser and
Mr. an d Mrs. Harold Blackston.

Slinderella meets

5

5

1982 FORD 150
4X4 PICKUP

NlMI

cON .MANY. ITEMS
TO MENTION

to die from exposure to cold than
gir ls of the same age. Children frequently dress inadequately for the
weather and try dangerous aclivlties such as playing on frozen
ponds, maklng tl'&lt;&gt;m suscepllble to
hypothermia.
Question : What are the sy mp
toms of hyp:Jther mia?
Ans wer: Someone suffering
from acute exposur e to the cold
will co mplain of ex Jr eme cold ,
numbness, fa tigu e and muscle
tension. Hypothermlcs ex per i-

#21

Connie Thompson qualified for
her 35 pound weight Joss tibbon and
certificate at the Tuesday nlght
meeting of th~ Mason class of
Slinderella. Ca rol McClure lost the
mos t weight and Chris Handley was
runnerup.
At the Monday night Five Points
class one new member was welcomro and_there was a lie for the
most weekly weight lost between
Betsy Stivers and Diana Herdman.
Judy Wolfe was ruMer-up. Jo Ann
Newsome Is lect ur er for
Slinderella .

#21!

#11A

• 650 cold cranking amps
in an B-inch case _

DISC BRAKE PADS

REBUILT
\~

NO HASSLE
GUARANTEE

PREMIUM QUALITY

CALIPERS

. ······OUR BRAND

Auto Parts You Can Trust for Ouality...Value ... Performance!

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WATER PUMPS

ELECTRONIC
IGNinON
MODULES

FUEL PUMPS

12 MONTH
12,000 MILE

12 MONTH
12,000 MILE

WARRANTY

WARRANTY

(lf(trOftit

SJ321

99C
MINI ZED
STEEL
MUFFLERS

Cot~trM

MoMk

for al uwt

GM......IIS,OS to
Fanl ....l20.40 to

PRICII IURI AI

SY!AR
SO,OOQ MilE

GUARANTEE

Ulll.

Mlll .•.} IS.OS

10

142.10

m ................... '42.1o

PlliCt.!l r•.IIJ ' ' IIHI.JC • 1011

FC29001

1978 CHEVROLET
CAPRICE
2 &lt;blrs. hard top, V·8, • r cood.. aut• tra,.,

1984 FORD
TEMPO

~~ TOO NUM~ROUS

:}1A\i"~~

I'

radialltres. wMe walls. bucllet sea~ rea r
""""' ileiog Stnck i 64973.

2 ~ 4 wheel dnva V·8. auto h"'. PS, PB,
radial Illes. llliite walls I; too D&lt;lwD. kJng woe
bed. gauges. ~Klin g rmr ~"" StncH 64981

" Pepsi, Pepsi Free
Mt Dew &amp; 7-Up

,

~pe

off

CASSETTE RECORDERS, WALK
AROUNDS, STEREO HEADPHONES,
BABY BEN CLOCKS, BLOW DRYERS,
CURLING IRONS AND MUCH MORE.
OUR CA NDY IS ALSO REDUCED

Impair ment of bot h ( or eit her)
more likely than any other group
to suffer from the cold.
Ad ditionally, the elderly so metimes do n't eat eno ugh. Mainl·
alning proper food int ake is essent ial because body hea t is
generated by metabolism. the
breakdown of food.
Men have a higher death rate
from hypo therm ia because they

Parts Plus
autostoro

Library lines

Watch The Mail For Your Key!

.1 Jso fill mu ll iplr mles as

\\'O l'~t'rs

f ·t r,, :1 l(t r-. .1t • n~t tht'
tc~mli '&gt;
'I'.., 1,11 r.t,\1.., J1f· •!d•·. t•1r'h
drftYI.... dt uc· il u~., · 1 1 :i t 'd l l'l.i~
d! S(.'.J :-&gt;t':·:. liUII i::. ·r' . . rnd lt'f':ld ~ ,,
pro gr.1~11

Farenhelt Ior 35 degrees Cen tigrade) or below_
Primary hypot hermia results
from cold weather or pro longed
exposure to poor ly hea ted dwellings , wh lle seco ndary hyp:J therm ia is connected wil h severe
illn esse~ which cause shock or
overwhelming infection.
Question: Who Is most likey to
co ntrac t hypot hermia?
Answer: The body has two principal methods for co ns erving
bo dy heat. In the first, blood is
sent to the vital organs • rather
than the skin to keep war mth Inside the body. The second method
induces shivering, which co nstricts the body surface area to be
hea ted , and also generates additiona l heat from muscle ac tiv ity .

•

lt ' J liJatJon that homem akers fill

:lUll''. 1' th r

t!·.r·.r· pt"l...,.n.~wllhtht ·

i IJJ!lt''-

,,(

on!~ ·

multi~ I&lt;· roles as community lead ·
t'l ' ,!nd W;lgP (\ll'nf' l'~.

fJ,'I 'tt ·lp, I

tll" It·, 1 · ~·

tH'a)l tllt'l rut~n

th&lt;'

by Edwar d Schrec k, 0 ,0.
Assistant Professor
of Family Medicine
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine
Question: My neighbor 's elderly
mother almosl died from the eold
last w!nteL How co mmon is this
problem.
Answer: From 1968 to 1980,
about 6,500 peo ple died because
of eo ld , Atlanta's Na tio nal Center for Hea llh Statis tics reports .
Indeed, the Centers for Disease
Cont rol, also In Atl anta, cl aim that since 1980 such deaths are
Jnceaslng.
These deaths result from hypo thermia or low body te mpera lure, which occurs when the core
bo dy temperature Is 95 degrees

Several holiday projects and chaperones, Randy Smith and the
programs were ca rried out at the Rev . Dave Bryan. They were also
HOJl" Baplist Church, Gran t St. joined by the First Southern Baptist
Middleport _
Church, Rock Springs, youth and
Fruit baskets were prepared for their advisor, Keith Ashley,
In activities on foreign missions,
shutins and · several elderly residents who were also caroled by a the church pledged participation in
group from Ihe church. A holiday the Southern Ba pt ist O!urch's
meetlng of II'&lt;&gt; Women' s Mission· program, "Outreac h of the World ",
&lt;ary Union of the ch urch was held at a dedication to having missionaries
the home of Sa lly Walden, Point in all parts of II'&lt;&gt; world before the
turn of the century.
Pleasant.
Money was cono-ibuted Jo the
The O! ristmas program att the
c;,urch included recitations by Joey Lottie Moon offerlng in memory of
Bailey, Ashley Smith, Billy Ba iley, Breanna Campbell by her mother,
Rose Ann Bailey, and Kenny Debbie Campbell. A memorial
McC lelland, and a cantata was plaque will be dedlcaled at a later
presented by Sa lly Walden, Mary • date.
A revival conducted by students
Bryan, Dave Bryan. Randy Smith,
Dale Colburn , Rose Ann Ba iley, of Murry Coliege of Kentucky
Kenny McClellan, ami Billy Ba iley. concluded at the church Saturday.
Carl Walden was narrator, and
Heidi Smith was the pianist.
A Christmas candlelight service
was held at the church with Saliy
Walden in charge. Youlh taking
pan ln a Seneca Lake retreat Dec.
20 and 21 were Rose An n Ba iley.
Billy Bailey. Mike Smith and

leadt•rs hlp potPnt iol. It is rlescribed

rt~·pnfl~

Hypothermia, elderly a deadly combination

Church begins projects

FHA events beginning
Th(• ).1rn~ :-. ( 'h.ipl c' r nf 111(' Fu!Url'

Family medicine

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, January 16, 1986

ALTERNATORS

STARTERS
LIFETIME
GUARANTEE

LAST MORE THAN
TWICE AS LONG
AS GALVANIZED STEEL

ROONUFI(IUIID

12 MONTH
12,000 MILE

12 MONTH
12,000 MILE

WARRANTY

WARRANTY

PRtCII STAR! AT

HKIIITART AT

s

s

POINTS

WIRE SE1'S
REPLACEMENT
CATALYTIC CONVERTER

DISTRIBUTOR CAPS

NO HASSLE
GUARANTEE

NO HASSLE
GUARANTEE

NO HASSLE
GUARANT6E

PRIC£1 ITA IT AI

PRICII SUtr AT

PIICEI !TART AI

Calendar
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Middleport Child
Conservation League meets Thu rsday 7:ll p.m, Ohio Power Co,
offiCI', Ann Colbu rn will speak on
her life in Germany.
SUNDAY
POMEROY -The Meigs County
Genealogical Society meets 2 p. m.
Sunday at Meigs Museum. Roge!
ThelsJ wtll speak on Gennanv ,

.G&amp;J
P1111 Plu1 will c hMTiult)
re fund Ot txchtnot •nv lttm
In II UIIblt C:ondlllof\ Whtn
YOU C
lfUtnl proof Ol purCI'IUt
(t 1C:IP1 Pt nl Wh iCh 1\IVI
been lntlllled on )'OI.Ir car).
Tht l't our "no ftltllt" policy.

GALLIPOLIS
240 THIRD AVE- 1704 EA!TIRN AVE.
446-11 13
446 -4204
I AM 'TIL S:30 PM i AM 'TIL 7 PM

~·

.

._,, .P arts Plus autostoro
POMEROY
11 q W, 2nd AV £.
q2-j l)9

I AM 'TIL 1:30 PM

MASON, WV
ROUTE ll
13-SS11
8 AM 'Til S:lO PM

.

POINT PUASANT, WV
SIS MAIN It

675 -1520
SAM 'nl S PM

2611 JACliON AVE.
61S-2731
lAM 'Til 7PII1

CS86-o04

�...

,.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Page-S- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, January 16, 1986

Village funds t~tal $350,083 Movie shows restoration of surface-mined lands
All Middleport Village fu nds
totaled $350,00.59 as of Dec. 31,
Middleport Clerk-Treasurer Jon
Buck reports.
Receipts and expenditures durIng the month of December and the
balance of each month. respectively, of each fund making up the
total include:
General. $56,Dl1.82; $64,104.61,
$14,644.66; strl'et maintenance,
$Z7,761.96, $6,785.57, $4,176.18; HUD,
$Z76.66, no disbursements, no bal·
ance; federal 11'Venue sharing, no
receipts, no dlsbu rsements, $944 .0'2;
street light, $2,012.13. $1,633.58,
$3,940.29; street levy. $~12. 13,
~.070.75, $2,343.56; fi re equipment, $10,000.34. $749.61. $1960.29:

: (rllllipolis attorney
will ·represent 1ude
Meigs County Coun Judge Patrtck O'Brien has apJX&gt;inted Donald
A. Cox, Galllpolis, as the defense
attorney for J lmmy Jude, 29,
aharged with rape in as Jan. 5
Incident.
J ude appeared in the county
court for a preliminary hearing
Tuesday at which time his court
appoin ted atto rn ey , Jen nifer
Sheets, withdrew from the case
because of a conflict of interest. The
hearing was reset for Jan. 31 a nd
Jude is being held in the county jail
with bond set at $100,1XXJ.

Two lotto winners
CLEVELAND tUPI I - Two
Ohio Lotto players picked all six
numbers in Wednesday night' s
drawing to claim equal shares or
the $.1 5 million top prize.
The names of the players will be
announced after their tickets are
valida ted at a regional lottety
office. The winning numbers were
6, 23, Z7. 29, 32 and :r .
The players each will receive $1.7
million in 20 annual payment s of
$88,433.'10, before taxes
In addition to the top-prize
winners,ll4 players selected five of
. the numbers to win $9'Jl rach. Also.
17,931 players had four of the
numbers. winning $52 apit'('{'.

Weather forecast
Today ... sunn)· a nd warmer. High
50 to 55. Souther ly winds 10 to 20
mph.
Tonight.. .mostly clear. Low nrar
40. Southerly winds 10 to 15 mph.
Friday... cloudy with scattered
showers. High near 50.
Chance of rain is near zrro
percent today .
Extended fo""ast
Saturday through Monday
Fair Saturday.. scattered showers Sunday .. and fair again Monday. tughs In the 50s Saturday and
In the ;10s l&lt;l lower 50s Sunday and
Monday. Lows In the 30s Saturday..
in the mid 00. to mid 30s Sunda , ...
and 25 l&lt;l 30 Monday.

A new movie. "A Special Place Mine area is shipped via ttllck. the
Called ReCreation Land,' ' ·has been
Musklngum Electric Ra ilroad and
produced by Ohio Power Company.
a conveyor be It to Ohio Power's
The 19-mlnute fUm, the third Musklngum River P lant near
produced by the company over the Beverly, Ohio. Electricity generpast ~yea rs showing ho w su rface- ated there and at four ot ber
mined lands are being restored to coal-fired plants owned by the
areas of public usefulness. now Is com'pany serve the needs of Ohio
available for viewing through the
Power's 62l.IXXJ customers in 53 of
co m pa n y's Co mm unica tors Ohio's 88 counties.
Program
Ohio Power, through its subsi "A Spec ial Place Ca lled ReCrea- · diary Central Ohio Coal Company.
tion Land " features a buck deer,
has been actively mining for coal in
common to the area, which leads thaI area since 1944. Reclamation
viewers through various mining was accepted as a prime responsiand rec lama tion processes and bi lity from the onset. with the
helps them to discover ReCreation
Land. In addition to highlighting the
operations of Big Muskle, the
world 's largest walking dragline.
and other mining/recla mation machinery. the film captures the
scenic beauty of the ReCreation
Land and much of the wildlife
which inhabits the area.
A number of ReCreation Land
visitors explain also what a ttracted
them to the widely acclaimed area.
A part or Ohio Power's .125,!00acre Muskingum Mine area, ReCreation Land is a 30,000-acre
hideaway for people interested In
outdoor activities such as ca mping,
fishing, hiking, hunting, trapping or
just relaxing. The area lies within a
trtangle bordered by Zanesvtlle,
Cambridge and Marlena.
Coal mined In the Musldngum

lire truck. $1,341.43, $47.16,
$2,466.91; public transportation,
3,005.30, $5,407.55, $10,320.15 deficit:
sanitary sewer escrow, no receipts.
$10,000,$130,977.58: water,$9,958.11.
$22,117.54, $15,825.92; sanitary
sewer. $8,524.44. $18.745.96 ,
$23,825.76; swimming pool, $&amp;lOll,
$20.43, $1. 653.33; cemetery.
$6,561.64, $2.128.45, $295.58: water
me ter trusts. $85. $93.03, $11,396.57:
L contingency , no receipts,
$4,079.33, $5,910.93 deficit; economic development, $3,1XXJ, $720.37.
$10,633.37.
Receipts for the mo nth of December totaled $140.786.'70 while
disbursement s totaled $172.606.81.

The International Order of Job's
Daughters will hold it s semi-annual
Installation on Saturday at 7:30
p.m. a t the Middleport Masonic
Temple. All masons. eas tern stars
and any young lady interested in
Job's Daughters are welcome.

Friday dance set
There will he a square dance
F'riday. 8 p.m.. at the Long Bottom
Community Building.

BARGAINS THROUGHOUT
THE STORE
---- ~------

11

The area now called ReCreation
Land was dedicated, in 1963. to
p.Jblic use, free of charge.
The company ea rlier had produced the films "Harvests" and
"ReCrea tion Land." The latter has
been shown "In practica lly every
school and to nearly every organi·
zation, at least once, in this area
since the film was produced in

--

·-

r

htrit&lt;l_gt house ·i
~

I SHOE PLACE
II '\~ MIDDLEPORT____ - j
t,

.'

Enclosed Please Find My Spacial Prepaid .. .

Valentine
Love Line!
Compose Your Own Message
t~etow

....

....::r
~

NAME . .......... ..
ADDRESS . . ....... . .
AT 20'
TOTALAM T.
TOTAL WORDS
.. ENCLOSED .
CITY ... . ........ IN MESSAGE . .
PER WORO
L••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

CLIP AND MAIL YOUR LOVE LINE

All ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND RECEIVED BY FEB . 12

SANDY'S
BOUTIQUE
NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

320

Super Sale Days!
ALL WINTER BLOUSES $1 QOO
ALL SOCKS NOW 1/2 PRICE
STORE HOURS:
9:30 Til 5 MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
9:30 Til 12 NOON THURSDAY
.,

Ill Court St.

O'Brien processes 35 cases
Thirly-five cases were processed
Wedresday In Meigs County Court
by Judge Patrick O'Brien.
Fined were Larry Cundiff, Pomeroy , s.m and costs, 30 days In )all
with !l days suspended, two year's
PlQba lion, DWI; costs only for no
operator's license: $100 and costs
for possession of martjuana;
Danny Morgan, Albany, $:150 and
costs, 120 day licenSE' suspension, 10
days In )ali, DWI : Charles Aelker,
Pomeroy, $.llO and costs, ~ day
license suspension, 10 days In jail,
DWI; costs only for left of center;
Keith Myers, Pomeroy, SJXl and
costs,lldays In jail, ~day license
suspension, DWI; costs only for left
of center; 30 days In jail and costs
for no driver' s license.
Lawrence Yeau·ger, Cheshire,
$250 and costs for littering with $225
suspended and ordered to clean up
litter within 60 days; Brian E.
Griffin, Reedsville, $150 and costs,
ll days In jail suspended, one year
proba lion, possessing a deer taken

with a gun durtng closed season;
ftobert Sprague, Tuppers Plains,
$150 and costs, ll days In jail
suspended, one year probation,
taking a deer with a gun durtng the
closed season; Shirley M. Yates,
Bidwell, $50 and costs, lldays In jail
suspended, one yea r probation,
petty theft; Leonard Da Uey, Long
Bottom, $50 and costs, noq&gt;erator's
license.
Dennis Hart, Middleport, $10 and
costs, disorderly conduct; Larry
Snyder, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
failed to display valid registration ;
Jackie Johnson, Letart, W.Va., $25
and costs, failed to detach temJX&gt;ra ry tag from special permit after
harvesting a deer; Ryan Mahr,
Middleport, $ll and costs, reckless
operation: Minter Shartiger, Middleport, $10 and costs, failed to
display valid license plates.
Fined for speeding were Lisa
Hill, Belpre, $22 and costs; James
Boyer, Middleport, $!1 and costs;

Carl Morrts , Rutland , $21 and
costs; Terrie Riley. Reyooldsburg,
$:18 and costs; Robert Harrow,
Flint, N.C., $25 and costs; George
Hill, Mariet ta, S21 and costs; Jack
Jacobs, Clearwater, Fla., $21 and
costs; Mary Mocyunas, Ravenswood, W.Va ., $:!4 and costs; Todd
Tucker, Mason. W.Va., $28 and
costs; Jerty Hubbard, Pomeroy,
$~ and costs; WUits Blower,
MlddleJX&gt;rt , SlD and costs; Thomas
Gllkey, Malta, $~ and costs;
George Berry Ill, Delaware , $23
and costs; Michael Marcum, Long
Bottom , $24 and costs; Donald
Richmond , Middleport, $22 and
costs.
Fodeiting bonds in county court
were Edwin Fehrendock, Cincinnati, $50; VIctoria Slack, MiddleJX&gt;rt, $50; Larwence Pal, North
J ackson, $43; Emma Gibson, lndustty, Pa., $50; Richard Kerns,
Mesa, Az., $70; Brian Pinkerton,
Gallipolis, $70, all for speeding.

Business Services
ELUM
REST HOME

IPrniously lutiORd IHI t4om•l

674 Plum St.
Middleport
•Tender Loving Care
•Senior Citizens
•Disabled
•24 Hour Care

CAU JOE BOWLAND

992-3595

12/30/ 1 mo.

The Daily Sentinel Pomeroy, OH.
8:00A.M. to 5:00 P.M.

Meigs County Property transfers
R. Craig Mathews to Feeney
Bennett Post 128, The American
Legt&gt;n of Ohio, Lot 160, Mldd. Vill.
Anthony Pi2zino, Margaret Pizzino to F'ranklln Real Estate,
UXl27A &amp;13 T3N 12W, Sutton.
Cleora Shumway to Carl ·E .
Smith Pete, Inc., Right of Way,
Orange.
Hanford E. Stanley, Evelyn
Stanley to Jack R. Stanley, Joyce A.
Bowen, S.#l6 T-2 R-13, Sallsbuty.
~hard D. Seyler, Nella E.
Seyler to Farmers Bank &amp; Sav . Co.,
0.013A T-2N R-lJW, Saltsbuty.
Farmers Bank &amp; Sav. Co., to
Richard D. Seyler, Nella E. Seyler,
0.040A T-2N R-lJW, Saltsbuty.
U.S.A. Admin. of General Services to Okey A. Boggess, 1.60A T-2N
R-llW, Lebanon.
Rodney A. PUllins to John Kevin
PUllins, Lot 54, Porn. VUI .
John H. Motley, Dec., Gertrude
Van Cooney, Cert., Mldd. VUI.
Rollie Douglas Stewart, Ruby
Stewart to Linda Lou Stewart, S.#S
T-2 R-13, Porn. Vill.
Delbert Ours to Tuppers Plains
Chester Water District, Right of
Way, Lebanon.
Dale Lawoon to T.P.C.W.D.,
Right of Way, Lebanon.
Robert Black, Wilma Black.
Mary Black to T.P .C.W.D., Right rl
Way, Lebanon.
Owen Fred Dalley , Carol ~e
Dalley to T.P.C.W.D., Right of
Way, Lebanon.
Elson Dalley, Anna Lee Dalley to
T .P .C.W.D.', Right of Way ,
Lebanon.
James E. Ward, Betty L. Ward,
T .P.C.W.D. , Right of Way ,
Lebanon.
Thomas R. Hunt, Nancy L. Hunt
to T.P.C.W.D.. Right of Way,
Lebaoon.
Edwin S. Cozart to T.P .C.W.D..
Right of Way, Lebanon.
Virginia He ndrick s to
T.P .C.W.D., Right of Way,
Lebanon.
Paul John Shaffer toT.P .C.W.D.,
Right of Way, Lebanon.
Dorothy V. Br e wer to
__.T.P.C. W.D., Right of Way,
Lebanon.
Robert Durst , Mal(lne Durst to
T .P .C. W.D., Right of Way,

Appeal filed
The plaintiff. Mary Jane Talbott ,
admlnlstralrtx of the Terry D.
Talbott estate, has llled an appeal in
the Meigs County Court d Appeals,
Fourth Appellate Dlslricl, In a
wrongful death action against
Columbus and Southern Ohio Elect·
ric Co., American Electrtc Power
Co. and Ohio Power Co. Talbott won
a $2 mllllon judgment from Ohio
Power In a November trtalln Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Columbus and Soutbem and A.E.P.
were dismissed as defendants
durtng the trtal.

Lebanon.
Dennis Roush , Ruth A. Roush to
T .P.C. W.D., Righ t of Way,
Lebanon.
Marshall R Roush, Deborah V.
Roush to T.P.C. W.D., Right d Way,
Letart.
Gerald Hayman, Foell Hayman
to T.P.C.W.D., Righi of Way,
Letart.
Eugene Carpenter, Elizabeth
Carpenter to T.P.C.W.D., Right of
Way, Lebanon.
Chalmer B. Dailey, Mary L.
Dailey to T.P.C.W.D., Right of
Way, Lebanon.

Right of Way, Lebanon.
Ruby Congo toT.P.C.W.D., Righi
r:l Way, Lebanon.
Minta Gwens to T.P.C.W.D.,
Right of Way, Lebanon.
Mattie Lawrence to T.P.C.W.D.,
Right of Way, Lebanon.
David G. Wolfe, Virginia H. Wolfe
to T.P.C.W.D., Right of Way,
Lebanon.
Daisy VanMeter to T.P .C.W.D.,
Right of Way, Lebanon.
Fannie Durst to T.P .C.W.D.,
Right of Way, Lebanon.
Edson Roush, Mary Roush to
T.P.C.W.D., Right of Way, Sutton.
John N. Ihle, Mary Lou Il\le to
T.P.C.W.D., Right of Way, Sutton.
Dorothy Roseberry. Cecil Roseberry to T.P.C.W.D., Right of Way,
Lebanon.
Paul E. Harrts, Marilyn A.
Harrts to T.P .C.W.D., Right of
Way , Chester.
Gordon Proffitt to T.P.C.W.D..
Right of Way, Lebanon.
Laura Baker to T.P .C.W.D.,
Right of Way, Chester.
David A. Hensler, Rebecca E.
Hensler to T.P.C.W.D., Right of
Way, Sutton.
Daniel C. Hensler, P atricia
Hensler to T.P .C.W.D., Right of
Way, Sutton.
Bernard Paul Lavalley, Bernice
L. Lavalley toT.P.C.W.D., Right of
Way, Sutton. ·
Lebanon Township Trustees to
T .P .C.W. D., Right of Wa y,
Lebanon.
David A. Powell, Luella Powell to
T.I:'.C.W.D., Righi of Way, Sutton.
Warren Rose, Pauline Rose to
T.P .C.W.D. , Right of Way, Sutton.

Wayne Roush, Claudia Roush to
T.P.C.W.D., Right of Way, Sutton.
Charles Bush, Alice Mazie Bush
to T.P .C. W.D.. ~t of Way,
Sutton.
Jacob M. Bush, Carole S. Bush to
T.P .C.W.D., Ri ght of Wa y,
Lebanon.
Judith D. Dixon, Roger Spencer
to T.P.C.W.D., Right of Way,
Chester.
Robert R. Hams, P atricia Louise
Harris to T.P.C.W.D., Right of
Way, Chester.
Alexand.e r Co ul a dl s to
T.P.C.W.D., Right rl Way, Chester.
Orville M. Eastman, Golda Eastman to T.P .C.W.D., Right of Way,
Bedford.
William N. Pickens, Frances M.
Pickens to T.P.C.W.J?.. Right of
Way, Lebanon.
Donald G. Roush, Angle E. Roush
to T.P.C.W.D., Right of Way,
Lebanon·.
Ceo J . Moore, Frances A. Hewitt,
Frances E. Hewitt to T.P.C.W.D.,
Right of Way, Lebanon.
. Cecil G. DeLong, Louise DeLong
to T.P.C. W.D., Right of Way,
Lebanon.
Artlllr 0 . Allen, Lucille K. Allen
to T.P.C. W.D., Right of Way,
Lebanon.
Dale Lawson to T.P.C.W.D.,
Righi of Way, Lebanon.
Robert T. Hewitt to T.P.C.W.D.,
Right of Way, Lebanon.
Gordon Proffitt to T.P.C.W.D.,

MaiTiage license
A marriage license has been
Issued in Meigs County Probate
Cou rt to Jerry Lee Davis, 23,
Tuppers Plains, and Cynihia Lynn
Crites, 21, Reedsville.

Closed Monday
There will be no Monday trash
pick-up In the Racine area since the
county lanclfill will be closed for
Martin Luther King Day. Pick-up
will be on Tuesday and Wednesda~.

$500,000 sought
in damage action
Harold Fed~ and Virginia Fetty
of Langsville have flied a $500,1XXJ
suit In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court against Lenvllle R.
Harman, Rutland, for damages
allegedly sustained In a traffic
accident on Apr. 7, 1985. The
plaintiffs allege that the defendani's negligence caused the accident which occurred on Rt. 124 in
Rulland Township.
BancOhio National Bank, Columbus, has been awarded a $4833.79
judgment from John S. Thomas,
Pomeroy.
An action flled by Michael T.
Dunigan, et al, against Brynn K.
Sutphin, et al , has been dismissed.

Sorority to meet
Xi Ga mma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi SolQrity wUI meet
Tuesday at 7: ll p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Evelyn Knight for a card
party .

-

Want Ads

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992·3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

10-8-llc

Or Wtilt O..tly Stthlllf Clnllhtel Dept
Ill Cnutl St. PDMtro,. 0!\lo 4S7i!

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

DOZER. BACKHOE,
TRENCHER . SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER,
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES.
REClAMATION. PONDS.
SPRI~G DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

PH. 992-7201

ANGIE'S PIZZA
349 No. 2nd Avo.
lllcld'-port, Oh.

992-3559

FREE DELIVERY
IN

SYRACUSE. POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
BRADBURY
MASON, W. VA.
Open Mon.- Thurs. 4-11
Fri. &amp; Sat . 4-12

tiS I .-.

AUTOMAnC
TRANSMISSION
OVERHAUL
ALL AMERICAN MADI
CARS I !RUCKS

•TRANSFER CASES•
•TORQUE CONVERTORS•
•USED - REBUILT
TRANSMISSIONS•

w. o,n,

F11 All YoUI P•l•ll•t N"lt
PlUS: Office S.pplin &amp;
furniture, Wedding
Clnd Graduation
Slafionery, Magnetic
Signs, Rubber Stamps,

Business Forms,
Copy Strvius, Etc.
2SS Mill lt., Middleport

992-215

All Makes

•Washers •Oishwa~hers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195

ll -14-tfc

4·5·tlc

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
EVERY

·

Are vtewers usng the T1me Machtne to zap your adverttstng?
Not rt tt's lf'l newspapers. Newspaper readers regard ads as news aoout tne
marketplace- what's ror sal.e. wnere. ancl for how much. 60% of readers "look
forward·· to the ado.;ertistng tn their newspapers- more than say that about
adverttstng tn TV. mag8zu1es, radio and matl comOtnect'
Newspaper readers look forward to ads ... they don't fast forward past them.

The Daiiy·Sentinel

Our time has come.

OF

FIDUCIARY
On Decttn!Jor 24, 1985.
In tht Mtigt County Probtte
Court, CtN No. 24897.
EHubtth Ann Wtbltw, Bo•
111, Rud..d, ohio 45776,
Wit

appointed Extcutrl• of

Ethel E. Chop·
man, cllcoooed, loto ol B011
188, Rutlond, Ohio 41771.
Robtrt E. Buck,
Probtto Judge
lht lltlll af

UmoK . ~oa.w~. Cio*

(112, 8, 113tc

NEEDED: RETAIL
SALES PERSON
ASST. MANAGER

SAT. NIGHT

•GIB SON REFRIGERATOR
•SATElliTESAtES &amp; SIRVICE

on Outv

9·30·11

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

"Wt Rul F11 lm "

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

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

CALL

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHEffiR-985 -3307

4/ 1/tln

CLARK
COIN SHOP
We Buy and Sell
Gold &amp; Silver Coins

Also Class Rings
Scrap Silver &amp; Gold
OPEN 10-S WEIUAYS
10·2 SAlUIDAT

Court St., Pomeroy
Aftttr 7:00-367 ·0626
J.7· 1 mo. d.

Roger Hysell
Garage
At. 124,Pornoroy Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

446-4522

U·SA~E

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John Deere.

New Holland. Bush Hog

AUTO

Farm EQuipment
Dealer

RENTAL

St. Rt. 160 'NDrlh
81lllpoll1, OhiD

Farm Equi~ment
Parts &amp; SeNiee

t -3-tlr

7/11/tln

lfttmn

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYL &amp; AWMIIIIUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20 yMrl
" Free Estimates"

CALL COLLECT:

Ph. 16141 843-5425

1-12-2 mo .

HaYO Your Wttldi"t,
AMivtrsary or Spec:tal

O.rosion on Vldeo....We
Tapt Any Sptc:ial Ouosion.

CHARLES BARLEY
PH. 742-2050

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARIAN
CliNIC
Paul E. Shotkey, DVM
Pl. PLEASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson Ave.
SMAlL ANIMAL HOURS
Moo.-Wtd.-Thurs. 3·S pm
Tu11. 6:30 -1: lri. 1-2 pm
lalurtlay 10-11:30 am
lUGE ANIMAL &amp;

SUIGEIT IY APPl.

PH. 304·675-2441

BEND AREA CAll
Ripley Office
For Hours
304·372· 5709

10 14-llc

11-28-3 mo.

~110 Tr••••lttloa

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

"z-a:

3-24-tfc

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

..

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

-

·417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
8-13 tin

- Concrete work
- Piumlling end electrictl
wook

. . . . . . . . IMrT'-Iit.

Hy .. lrt

......" .......,..,,. wlich
Wf1t II hilt, Ctftlt ilt ftr ocf•ict.

will cCHt•inct ~It t better wa~.
OM •ilh

thfrt

NIW !D!A-

U Crv•tl A•L. Goltlpotlt. Olt.
llat ... to ......
t

c.......

3-D AUTO CENTER

V. C. YOUNG Ill

110'1• W. llalto St., P-rey, Ohio, 992·6778

992·6215 or 992·7314

BED UNEIS S17500 Full Si11

Pomoroy, Ohie

1'165 .00 minil

repair. pa n s, a nd suppliu . Pick
up and deli11&amp;ry, Davis Vacuum
Clean er. one half mile up
Geo rg es Creek Rd Call 814 ·
446·0294.
Pregnancy Ta sting : Birth control
services, VO testin g; confiden ti al; slidin g fee acale; Planned
Pa renthood of S.E.O.• for appt
Call 614-446·0166 or au.

Racine Gun Snoot spontored by
Racin e Gun C lub . Every Sunday,
beginn ing at 1:00 p.m. Factory
Choke 12 guaga shotguns.
For o ~o~e rn i gh t relief of cold sorea
and te~o~er blisters, uae LVtine
T abs
Fr u th Phuma c y ,
Middleport .

Exe rcise Program I Tuesdara and
Thurtdays, 6 :00 p.m. Hartford
CD mmu nity Building. Startt
January 28th. 304·882 ·3484.
$ 12 .00 tDr 10 aesaions . Mar,
Smith.
McDan ie l Cut tom Butchering, fi

day• a week, 304-882 ·3224.

4

Giveaway

Female Benjie· typ e dog to gNe
aw ay. 1 ye ~r old. Good with
ch ild ren. Call 61 4-992·6349 .

Male Siam• • c at to gi~o~a away.
Good with children . Neutered .

Call614-949· 2461.
4 puppies to give awev. Mother
Y, Bugla - Buutt Hound .
Fether·H. 614-99 2- 3844 .
2 kittens, 17bobtail 6 monthtold.
3 klnent pan Per1ltn pretty, 2
mothtlf c.te. 304-896· 3137, 9
AM lo 2 PM .

Smt ll puppie1, 304-896-3864
after 6 ·00 PM .
Female Boston Terrier . to good

home. 304-675-4158 .

Puppies, part Beeg'e and Elk·
hound. 304-675 ·5621 ,

11·8·t!C

No job too omoll Of too
big . We do Sotupa end

12-20-1 ..

.......................
....... 111 ..... ._ . .

WANT ADS

Losumall girl• gi111n with doG
decal on len• lolt In Pomeroy
around Dec . 27 th. 8,.·992·

B

Public Sale
&amp; Au ction

RICK PEARS ON AU CTIONEER
SERV ICE Estate, farm , an tique.
liQuidation ~a l es . lietn aed Ohio
and Welt Virg inia. 304 5785 Or 304.n 3·5tl30.

n a.

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for le te model c leen
uNd carl .
J im Min k Ctlev.· Oid• Inc.
Bill G en e Johnton

6t4 -"6-3672

WANTE D TO BUY u&amp;ed wood &amp;
coal heaters. SWA IN'S FURN I·
TU RE. 3 rd. &amp; O liv e St. Gallipo ·
lis. Ca ll 614 ·4-'8 · 31 59.
TOP CASH Pl kt tor '83 model
alld new er uaed can . Smith
Buick -Ponti11c, 1911 E11tem
A~o~e , Gallipolis. r.au 81 4 · MB ·

'

IWNN ING IOAADI . ~USH GUARD&amp; . TAILGATE PROTECTO RS
DUNDEE NEW REPLACEMENT PARTS

22 82

.

Want to buy goo d uNCI IH.::WiCI'
COO k l tD ve Dt gil CODk ltOYf .' .

Cell 614 · 26&amp;·8426 or 614- .
266-1669 .

Blue Streak Tax Service

W. E. (Bill) SNOUFFER ·
FEDERAL-STATE
INCOME TAX RETURNS
107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.
PHONE 992·7075
9:00 A.M.- 5:00P.M. Mon. thru Set.
Evenings &amp; Sunday By Appointment

HOURS :

1-15-tln

,,

SWEEPER and sewing machine

9

!Free Eatimetes)

or 992·61IMI

......"·~..... J.. ..flotn,

Harder and my nurse s. Mrs.

5246

~ licensed Clinical Audiologist
::t
z (614) 446--7619 or (6L4) 992·6601

YOUNG'S

Pll. "14) 992-3361

, ,_.

In local aru. Prefer
person with sales
experience and
knowledge of
acounts receivable.
Send resume to P. 0.
Box 7291,
Pomero , Ohio

Th anks so much for all the
praye rs , CJHdl. flow era, calla and
11 is i to~ while I was in hoiPital.
Friends er e great I Also thanks to
my Ooctort Holze r, Strafford.

6 Lost and Found

Citi11M"

IT

Scen ic Hills.
Th e Phi ll ip Lee Family
Dinah , Tim &amp; Phil Jr.

l onely, MIKI a d atf!l1 Call Dat•
line 1-800-972-7676 .

REPAIR

Underpinning
"Spodal lotos for Sonior

Readings .

baareavment , also to the

Pa ramedic' s, do ctor's, nurs" &amp;
sta ff at Holu r M &amp;d ical Center &amp;

3 Announcements

rle Hm P, full Thne
Shop Teehnlelan

RENT A CAR

Do With A Mobile Home

~OTICE OF
APPOINTME~T

of

•SPHD QUEEN lAUNDRY

"VINYL SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

SHADI, OHIO
Anything Thot Hoo To

3 Announcements

I wis h to thank all ot those who

sent flowers. food. money . gava
w o rds of co nsolation in our hour

HEADQUARTERS FOR

B&amp;D MOBilE HOME
REPAII SEIYICE

1.1 Help Wanted

1 Card of Thanks

992 ·5912 .

54 Mise . Merchandise

Public Notice

Announcemen ts

J oann Stewa rt .

AND SERVICE
•SYLVANIA

Bashan Building

110 .

WE ARE YOUR SALE S

•ZENITH

Rt. 2, Patriot, Oh.

I

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
Residential &amp; Commerc ial

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only

614·379·22
lf.

312/tln

985-3561

6:30 P.M.

o..rflaul

992·3345

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Automatic

Transmission

104 Mulberr~ Av., Pomeroy

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURI U!£1

- Addona end remodeling
- Roofing and gutter woric

PHONE 992-2156

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

CONTRACTING

CARPENTER
SERVICE

The Daily Sentinel

RADIAT,OR
SERVICE

J&amp;F

JIM CLIFFORD

r·········-·······---·-·······-·---------·-·--------------~

WINTER SALE NOW
IN PROGRESS ·.I :

grass cover.

1976," sa id L.J. Hedrick, Ponsmouth Dil•ision Manager for Ohio
Power.
Arrangt•ments for showing "A
Special Place Ca lled ReCreation
Land" can be. made by cont acting
anv Ohio Power office.
Ohio Power's Communicators
Program has provided speakers,
films. videotapes and slide presenta tions on a 1vide variety of topics to
more than 500.000 aud ie nce
members over the past nine years.
All programs are presented free of
charg&lt;&gt;.

r- -- -----------------=-=---------:----- - - -

To meet Saturday

-- -. - - - -

company planting near ly .JO-milllon
trees over the yPars prior to the
passage of new mining laws In the
1970s calling for the crea tion of
rolling hills and the planting of

The Daily

•

Wanted to buy motor for VW
Atbbitt . Call 614· 446·4184 .
Buying daily gold , t iNtr COinl,
ringa. jewelry. sterlin g ware, old
coins, large cu rrency. Top prices Ed Bur ke« Barber Shop,
2 nd 4.1/f Mid d lepo rt , Oh . 814·
99:1·3476

c ••h

fo r old booll:a , lentrl.
and pamph leta:l200 or
mort tor good cop y at Browne' I
Cinc innati AlmMtc, 1810. loa
d i~t let ,

114, Am.,o . Ohio . 46701 .
614 -693 -a9t6 .

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
9

Pomeroy

LAFF-A-DAY

Wanted To Buy

Buying Rew Fur. S.ei11nd Deer

hides Selling-tfllpping tuppllet
Wheet and nita ltea George

(

Buckley. 1-814-1584-47151

Houfl 12-9 p.m. Lett time to

I

44

Apartment
for Rent

R
Duplex tor rent, 561 Third Ave
G_e lllpohl 2 bdr , llvingroom:
dmlngroom, new kitcf'len,
f•ced beck yard , refrig &amp;
range. UBO plus utilitlee &amp;
tecurlty deposit Cell Bt.t-446 0190

buy fur It FebNiry 2, 1$88

Elllp luyllt t' tll
St~fVII:I'~

.t roorna fumilhed cottage, no
pet I, 1 lmtll child Call 814-

&lt;41-0321

11 Help Wanted

3 rooma • bath, furnished
utiht1• furniShed , 1200 mo'
Call Earlie Carr, 614 446. 3793
3 room &amp; bath. furm1hed,
1u1tebla for adulta Call 6U·
448 -3733 or 614 U6·0171

Wtnted reliable lady to live in

Furn efficiency •190 ut1htt11
Ptld 920 4th .. Gelhpolls 511'1
gla Cell446 •416 attar 7pm

'

with ekferly ltdy Send resume
to 264 First A~• Gell!pollt, Oh

Furn

46631

c ...,..,,.,, ..,_,..,~,...,._., ."' .. .,., .,.,, ,,• ..,

Po1t10n Open- Social WOrker
Contrect part -1tma. MS preferrtd . BS wtth couneaUng expe-

1

~~~m.::n~'r':~u F:~. 'G'!n~!

County Heollh Doportmont ot
114· 446-4612, eatentiOn 292
Equel Opportunity Employer
AVON Sell Avon PlY Chrit1mat
billa, limited time 1tart up taeFREE Call 814· 448 -3358
Eaperlanced bookkeep.- that
dO•n 't mmd al'1twtnng telephone Call 614 -446 -0813
E11y A11embly Workl •600 00
per 100. Guarel'1t"d ~ymant
No Experience-No Setae Det11lt
tend self addre1aed stamped
envelope Elan Vital -5847 :U1 8
Entarprlse Ad , Ft Pu11ce , ...Ft:-

33482
Government JO bs 116.040
169.230 Now htrlng Call805
887 6000 . Clltt R 9806 for
current tederalltst
Elsy euembly work l $800 per
100 Gueranteed payment No
IJtpertence -no selat Oetatlt
send selt -addreiSed stamped
envelope Eltn Vi tel -715 341 B

Enterpr111 Rd . Ft Pierce F l
33482
Baby 11t1er needed for 10 month

(Nd m Middlepon Send raftren

c11 toP 0 Box 743. Pomeroy ,
Oh10

WE NEED YOUR PRIOR MIL
ITARV SERVICE EXPERIENCE
IN THE ARMY NATIONAL
GUARD Monthly p~~ycheck
retnement benefits. eduuttonall
auistance, and otf'lar Mnaf1f1
ava1labla to our part t1me
mamben 304 675 3950 or
1 800-642 3619
ARE THOSE BILLS FROM THE
CHRISTMAS HOUOAYS PIL ING UP Jo•n the Army National
Guard snd you Wtll g•ta monthly
paycheck. a good part-time
carMr. and many other great
benefits 304 -675 -3960 or 1

800· 602-3019
REPS ·~ EEOEO tor buttnns
accountl Full t1rne UO.OOO to
teo.ooo Part t1ma t12.000 to
t18 ,000 No selling Repeat
busmeu Set your own hours
Tram1ng pro'llded 1 612 -938
6870 Mon -Fn , 8 AM to 5 PM

CST
Sem• dnvers wanted 2 vean
o~t~er the road 81lperutl'1ce 1 year
flatbed 23 years of aga or older
Current medtcal card Call J l
McCO'f . Inc 304-273 9391
Part t1me , full t•me reprasal'1ta trvll needed , educadonsl 11111.
Clll 304 -882 -2.f86
FUllER BRUSH Saln &amp; Ser
v1ce. earn 48 to 410 hour For
tnformatt01'1 call 304 675
1090
Msture women to lrve 1n with
elderly lltdy References re
q~.mad . ca ll after&amp; 00,304 875
, 97

12

Situations
Wanted

Vacan cy for the elderly m ou r
hOme Tra11'1ed and fltteer1 yaart
uper1ance Call 614 992
7314
Woman w11hes live 1n pot111on
w11h elderly mal'1 or woman
Exper.el'1 ct end Referen ces
304-676 2576

18 Wanted to Do

"This looks like a good spot

"of the computer."
1'

Would hke to keep elderly people
my homt1 Ca ll 614 367
0121

W•ll do baby11"1ng 1n mv home
EvMHngs 11'1d weekends Call
814 446 0137
JWO t Sepuc Tankl Clell'1ed
Aeuonab ly pnc.d Call any
time, 614 -245 -9264

41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr g.,.ge, ctty, get F.A,

31

Homes for Sale

By owner Mut1 " 11-mo...ect 3
bdr ranch , one cer Qtrege.
walking dlaunce from Nor1h
Gellla Htgh School Reduced to
129,900 CaiiBU-388-8711
bedroom tlou1e for .. 11
fireplace. 3 m1 eouth of Gall1po:
li1. t32 ,500 Ctll days B1444B - 1&amp;Hi or n1ght1 814 -44&amp; 1244

&amp; 1h, full b11ement,
1/) •era Centenary
Call 614 448 -3044
: : - - - - - - - -·lcBy owner Remodeled 3 bed·
room houtl on Rt 33 New FA
fumau. large lot t23.000
Collect 814-.623-6289
3 bdr

110~

- lc~

By owner Sutaly. 3 bedroom
houH tt 10 E St 1n Pomeroy 5
wooded acru , ftmrtv room
dining room, FA h.,t, 2 beth•:
b~~tment .
g~rege.
127.000
CoiiK' 614 -423 -1289
Single 1tory, 3 b«&lt;room m town
Close to ~eMol Euy to haat.
Btg Buck wood or coal 1tove
w1th m1sonry chimn•y
*22 600 Completely turl'111hed.
125 000 Call 114 -949 -2 933
after .t 00
2 bedroom hou" on 1 acre
ground. betwNn Syracu11 and
Rac..,aonRt 124 Viewo1uver,
gerega end 2 buildil'1gt Own..wlll help fil'1ance Compl.tety
remodeled Call 61 • -992 -9903
until 3 00 p m after 61-6-992 6949

P., t278 mo . t100dep
rei required Can 8U-•48
1171 or 614 -4•8-4306
Hou• for ,..,t or .... , with
opt1on 10 buy, 3 bdr , gerage,
central I If. all new carpet,
tencld 1n becll ytrd. epproa 1l'.!
m1 from town on Bulavtlle Ad
t326 mo 1150 MC. dtp Cell
tfter 5PM or weeke1'1dl, 614448 9208
wood F

•

3 bedroom, Hannan Trace
School dtstrlct. ref • deposit
required Cell 8U-448-8132
Saduded 3 bedroom modem
farmf'lou11. Natr mtn• 1260
depolit t260 per month Call
614 742 -2877
In Raclne, nice, 2 bedroom,
panty furnished . t200. I*
month plus depo.tt Call 614 -

949·2801
2 bedroom houM, full beument,
2 c..- g...-ge, tlreplace 614 992 -73!51 aft..- 15 p m
2314 Mt Vemon. 2 bedroom,
fu ll beHmant, glfiQt. 1 or 2
cl'llldran. t260 . month Plu1
Oapolit 304-171-2U1

e

Cklst co town,
room1 snd
bath newty decorated 2015 8th
St 127&amp; month Plus Depotlt
30•-•n-.. 300 or 176-2151
B•nd artl. 2 bedrooms, f'lomeon
rtver flfepltce end gerege. Homaltud 304 -676 6640 or

304 882 2405

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

32 Mobi le Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBilE
HOMES KESSEl 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 Ml
WEST. GALUPOLIS . AT 35
PHONE 614-446 7274
19B2 Cle'(1on, 14X66, tuttv
turn , Wtlhlf. dryer, AC , underpinning • porch Eac cond ,
Mall• an Off.- Call 61 .. · 2661821 or 61,· 268 -631!1
B• · leval. 1 Yt bath , 10ali0.
I UiOO C1H eve ' s e14-4411324

Furnl1hiCI, AC. clblt, no c1ty
ta•as. beautiful river v1tw 1n
Keneuge Fosters Mobrla Home
Perk Celll14-•46 -1102
2 bdr fully furni1hed, 12x85.
conv locttlon, Upper River Ad .
watlf paid , MC dep requ1rad
Calll1'·446 -85158
Mobile home tor Nnt 2 bdr ,
With• &amp; dry..-. Floyd Clark Rd
oH 110 in Bktwlll, no ctuldranor
pets Fumithed, •175 mo Cell

114-381-1132
1~•70

n~shad .

3 bdr , 11h bath , fur·
1250 mo Ce1161.t -.t48-

3793

1982 Townhou11 Ux70 , 7122
expe1'1dO 2 bdr AC , bu1h-ln
miCt'OWIVI a. stereo large batt!,
garden tub , tome fum11ura,
wuhar dryet Underp 1 nn~ng
8x10 metal building 01'1 rented
lot Mutt aeli t16 .950 Call
614 -2'6 -953,

2 bdr unfum 12xl0. we1her r.
dryer hOokup 11'1 mrlt pelt HMC
01'1 R1 35 Cell 614 446 4369
or 304 676 -9760

1980 L1berty 14x64 2 bed room unfufl'11ahed . vtnyl undarplnnmg tncluded Must Mil Cell
304 773 5673

1339

MOBILE HOMES MOVED ,.,.
sured. rea•onable n~tes , Call
304-578-2331
1990 Liberty 14•54 2 br
unfurl'1tlhed vtnyl undarp_,.,,ng
mcludad Mutt Sell 304 773
5873
1973 Cameron trailer. '" New
Haven. all elec, pert~ally fur
n~hed . new underpenn1ng. must
sell
15 . 600 00 304 882 3 bedroom mob1le home 1211166
w1th 1 1 Oa200 lot. Plymale
Road Galhpoi11Ferry 304 676

3693

3 bdr furn11hld , 1V:. btth, g11, 4
m• , At 160 Adults 122&amp; mo
plu1 utihn11. Call 61.t -4482 bedroom mobile home for rent
naar Aacina Call 6U -992 '
5B58

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALlEY PUBliSH
lNG CO re commends thet you
do bu11nen w1th people you
kn ow end NOT to ltnd money
througf'l the ITIIII Ul'1tll you h1ve
lf'I'IMtiQIIed the oHenng
Metor 1teal bu1lding comp11ny
hat trftl available for conltroc
tlon or 1alas onented dealer
Complete tuunmg provided . 1'10
exper1en ca 1'1&amp;cesury All ctsh
bueine.. w1th •xcellanl 1ncome
pot8Rtlal Refundable depotit
required Contact V1c Ryan at
1-900-228 -4164

22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS -Refinance to
low fl•MI reel Up~~quityfor any
p.~tpo... Leeder Mortgsge Co ,

IU-1192· 3011.
~llmhld

capilli evailable for
11ftY bUik'ltll purpo .. Call614 -

2111·1772

23

Profe,.ional
Service•

Ltotl 'a Tax Slf'Vice ReMOnlble
flucl rotH C.II814· 24&amp; ·9U3
Rodnrt VUt.ge II .
lnconw tax ,.rvlce Fldarll &amp;
Still- WaiiiiCI Ru11ell. Brad
bury. Oh 114· 992-7228 .

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR ~
redltC:OYif your p~' ablauttful
tone. oell 10d1y, Wtrd't Kft·
boerd, 304-e71-1800 .,. 171·

3824.

2 bedroom furnished apt Ca ll
614 -992 -6434 or 304 B82
2618
The Mtpllt Elderly and Handl
HOUt11'1g All utlllt18S
peld ConWtl'1ianfly loceled for
Ienior cillune Ott ttreet perkIng Security al'1d t~ra protacuon
Uv•i" r111dent manager Rel'1tal
a .. istence available Cell 614 -

992-7022 E H 0

Nice 1 and 2 br apartments
downtown 304 676 221B .

8 -6
Two b.droom apartment for
rent t226 00 month , Camp
Conley pflont 30•-773-61&amp;3
2 bedroom apt leon Hud
approved. Homestead Retlty,
Broker. 304-676 6640 or 304

Forms for Sale

8 acre m1m farm Of1 McCumber
Ad for11lt U8 ,500 orrentfor
$250 per month 614 -992 6373 or 614 -992 -2H3

,1

acre farm CitY water 11pt1c
system~ 1 2112 4 barl'1
HickOry
Chapel Road Wrtte or cell
W•lham Momtol'1 . P 0 Box
1647, Colstup, Mont 59323 or
1-406 748 2497

JACKSON ESTATES APARTMENTS (Equal Hou.!ng Opportunity) monthly rent atart1 11
1176 tor 1 bedroom end t212
tor 2 bedroom , dtPOII'I 1200,
loct1ad nMr Spring VIII IV Pltzt
end Foodlend, pool end Cable TV
ev1il1ble, office hours a• poltl·
ble 10 em to 4 pmend 7 pmto9
pm Mondtry-Frldrt. Call 114·
446-2745 or l.. ve m••aga

2 bedroom fumlshtd and 2
bedroom unfurntthed apt, refranee• end depolit required.
New Htven . W Va 304 -8823287 or 304-773 -6024

45 Furnished Rooms
For rent Sleepmg Rooms and
hght houae keeping rooms Park
Centfll Hotel Call 614 -441
0766
Houtekaep1ng room range, rttng . lf'lere be1h male preferred.
util11111 pd t100 Call 446
4416 after 7pm

46 Space for Rent
Mobile home lot , 1 2'x50 ' 01
emaller. t75 water pa1d , 4th &amp;
Ne•l. Galllpoli1 Call '46 -4416
aher 8PM
Downtown office space Excel
l.nt locattol'1 on Second Ave
Clote to cour1 t1ou1a perfect for
auornav ·• CPA 1 01 othltf pro
fMIIOnals Buutiful hardwood
floors &amp; tnm All ut1l1t18$ pa1d
Call The W11aman Agency, 614
448-3644
Off1ce 1pace for rent Elcellent
down town locatiOn cloae to the
courtfloul8 Rafect for attor ney• Cal1614 446 -3644 Wile-man R.. l E1tate

47 Wanted to Rent
Gantlaman wants to rant room
w1th bath 1n priva te f'l o ma,
within City of Gtll1pol11 Call
614 -446 1789 ext 26

Merchandise

SWAIN

AUCTION 6 FURN IT URE 62
Ohve St Gal lipolis New &amp; used
wood coal 110v11. 6 pc wood LR
IUIII U89 , bunk bedl •199.
entron .. cllnan t99, new &amp;
ultd b«jroom su1t11 , ranges,
wn.,ger washers . &amp; 1hon New
llvtngroom &amp;lHtea t199 S599
lamp• also buying coal &amp; wood
stovM Cell614 -446 -3169

Delu11a 2 bdr downtown com plete kltchM. ell carpet. WISher.
dry41r, electric heat 6: AC Oep
requ iJad . , Cell dey1 614 -4464383 eve 6 we~Mendl 814-

e••·251·U05

furn ithed apt ., 4 room• &amp; bath.
no Ptll, aduttl Cell 814-4481519

Ulld Fum11ura · Orauar, &amp; bed,
metal otfica det:ka 3 m1les out
BullVIlle Ad Open 9am to &amp;pm,
Mon thru Sat

4 rooms &amp; beth fumtshld
located 735 Third-rear. t75
dop .. 1128 mo Coli 4ol8·3870
Of 446-1340

l.a!-ge I room upateirt apt •
furnished kh~h•. UOO mo
plu1 utllltl11, 2311111 Ave Rllf.
• dep, no pet1. Caiii14-44S-

41

Houses for Rent

6 room• &amp; bath. newly decorated InqUire at 9,8 Second
Ave GallipoliS
4 room• &amp;. bath. nawty decorlted 11'1qu~re at 918 Second
Ave Gelllpoh•
3 bdr , 8 Vt miles past Holzer on
Rt 160, UOO mo , 11&amp;0 dep ,
no pete C•lll14-388-9783
Houte fof rent , S360 mo plua
I 150 dep or for sale 3 bdr
fam•ly room. bath &amp; V, located
3Yr mi out of Gallipolis on Rt
588 Call 614· 266-67B9 or

3 bedroom• ttroe ytrd, city
echool , 314 Jrd St , Kenu•o•

Coli 614-&lt;46 7•73.

2 ~roomhouae*210mo *78
daposh:. 42 Chillicothe Ad Call
814-«8· 1340 or 814·•46·

Nicely fum i1had mobile 1\oml
elf ap1 . central air 11'1d heat I~
city adultl only Call614 4450338
AtdtcOflted apt , 2 bdr . 11 50
to U50 Ctll304 -175-510.t Of
304 6715 -5386 or 304-675·

7898
740% Seco.,dAVe 3bdr , 1190
mo. dep raquned Call &amp;l.t 448 -4222 between 9 &amp; 5

446 o·u9

4921
Juet available 2 .,.nmentl for

rent . Cllll14-44e-124•.
Apt. on Mtin St. In Chaehlra, 8
rooms ba'lt't, comp. fum . Dep.
rtQ .. t200 mo. Cell 81•·24&amp;-

a

3170

8818

3 bdr. hou• loc•ted betld• Rio
Col 114·448·

fum ept 131 2nd. Ave OellipoUI. 1 bdr.. ti31J mo., utUitl•
pMI. CtM
1 I tft~r 7pm.

0 - CD4Iolo

2014 or 114-441-1323.

"41·"

Maple dmatte 111 Tab le ala
cflalrt and hutch • 1:26. Cell
614 992 2371

Antiques

Ant1que Oulltl lhendmadel on
col'111gl'1mel'1t
' New Ap
pl~quea ·
I Whne . At 3, Box
: ~. ~~~:~S W VI 46631 ,

1 2

Houl8 coal l ump S. ltoker Z1nn
Coal Co Caii614-.U6 1408
Co~~llahan'a

Uaed Tlt8 Shop Over
1,000tltBI.IIZIJI12 , 13 , 14 16
16 16 5 8 m1l1t1 out Rt 218
Call 614 256 6251
Oa•rv cate 9 f1 wide with remote
comp , t300 Call 614 -245·

54 Misc. Merchandise

8\4-4ol6·0322
GOOD USED APPliANCES
Waehtrt, dryera, rafdgerators.
ranges Sklgg• Appllancu.
Upper River Ad betide Stone
Crnt Mottl 814 446 -7398
County Appliance, 11'1c Good
Ulld appllanc" tnd TV seu
Open lAM to !PM Mon tf'lnt
Set 614-446-1699, 8 27 3rd
Ave Gelhpoha , OH
Vtllrt Furniture, new • uaad
large ttetlon of quality tuml·
ture 1211 Eutarn A~t~e
Oa\Hpolla)
'

For 11le fill d1n &amp; h1y Contact
8NCI Da'lllOn, 614 -268 -1427
f1rewood for sa le $30 00 PU
load HEAP acceptl'ld Cell 614·
388-9341 , Roger MeAd a
Retr~gerator .

11de by aide . J
door . coppertome. frost tree ea
cond. 1300 Call 614 -245

9691
F~rewood 100% perfectly sea101'1ed oak Sphl. deliwered ,
stacked Cal1114 446-0373

Po le Butldmg
pl&amp;tely erected
entrance door.
11zaS available

24X40, com
overhead and
$3600 Other
Call 614 697 ·

OJSO
Hol'1ey extractor. bee hive &amp;
OthBI biB eQUipment, 'lery rtlto 1'11bla Must 1ell Call 61 4-2&amp;1 1579
Spirt f~rtrwood 840 per PU load
delivarftd 2 m1 abo~t~e S1lver
Bridge Cell 614 -446-1799 or
eve fi14·4.t6 -9646
4 cluster d1emond nng . over 2
kareta. U.OOO or belt otier Cell
614 446 -8176

TRS 80 Radio Sl'lack oo~uter
model 4 . 111nd. softwtre &amp;
11'11truct1on books t300 Call
614 -446 8175

2 Sears road hal'1dler tirM 16
mch 60 ~enes ,

mounted on
wtl1ta 1poke Chevy wha•l• Call
614 -446 -6541
Sf'lotguns tor sale W1nchntar
mod&amp;l 12 1 2 ga t500 Win
chester model12 - 20 ga 1600
Wmchtsttr model 24 double12
ga U60 Wmcha1ter model 24
double 18 g1 $300 WlnchnteJ
model 37 single 16 ga t126
Wmchntar model 37 lingle 20
ga S125 Lefever Nitro .pee
double 20 ga S400 (Browning
Belg ium grad a A-51 2 ga l576.
l1ghl 1w1hle model fired ie11
than 10 t1m11 1 Must sail collec
t1on . need money tor property ,
all gunt have ongmai!Mut1ng no
cracked wood Cell 614 446
9407
Beauty Shop Equ1pment Call
Gl.t -266 -1275 after 5 30
F1rewood m1x8d 1eaaoned S20
• p1ckup load you haul 11 Call
614 -446 4699
Love lilt &amp; etlan, oblong coffee
tabla 6 pc ftreplace ut1naels
bran plated . double bed mtttreu &amp; foundation , Call 614 446 4337
Fmrwood for sale Call614 266 1629
Sunbeam vaccuum cleaner 'g ood
con d extra ba91 826 Cell
614-256 -6417

Frte· l1andil'1g Hunuman coal
end wood bumar New, in
e11cellent cond1t1on Sell re11o
1'1able Cell 61 4 992 -6764 be
fora200pm
Oemonstret or Sa la Wood stove
Sdhl 0 24A\ Chainsaw and
Brush cuHer , 361 Vl Chi\1'111W
Call 61.t -992 -2094, Po meroy
Home and Auto
HeH Price I Flaahlng arrow aign1
t289 Lighted non •now U49
Unllghttd 1199 (ffH laner•ll
See locally ~ 8001423 · 0183 .
anY11m1 1800)628 -2828 . axt

504
5 kitchen upholsttred bantoolt
Very good condition Call &amp;1 4992 -2U1 after 6 00
198.. Ditch Witch 1510. 272
ht1 , U9 ,&amp;00 1984 Oltctt
Whcf'l 8510, 502 hr , U6 .500.
1980 460 B Cue Dour I way
bllde. 0 hours 01'1 ~ngtne mejor,
200 houre on ntw undercar tiiQt, US,OOO 1U6 Aoger128
101'1 low boy, 62500 1965
Pf'"cott tal'1dem ule 215 ton low
boy, t8500 lawaon and Law·
son Inc 614 -949 2293 or 61 4 -

698-6364
TONV ' S GUN REPAIRS, ho1 dip
reblualng . 111 tVPH of gun•mHh
work. flit "rvlce, 304· 1!1715 ·
4631

Livestock

2 yur old Outrttr Horte Mare.
bt'ok• 10 nde. t175 00 30.t-

882 ·3162

675 6799

P1ckeN Ul&amp;d Fum1t\Jra, good
quellty utad fumlture. hours
9 00 to 6 :00 or by appointment
304-675 -8483 Of 676-, .. 60

iiena, 50 cent1 uch, Butt&amp;lo, W

H1ll Prioel Fl1hing arrow algns
826911 lighted, non-arrow
82.t9 Ul'111ghted •199 (Free
lettertl ) See locally (800)4230 163 enytlma 1800)628
2828, e•t 604
Hydraulic wood tplitter,
1500 00 Cell eftat I 30, 304675 -4218

Vo 304·937·2288

64

large round belea of f'lay for ule
or tredefor cattle Cell81 4-448 1052 after &amp;PM

For aale hey never wet red clover
I orchard gra11 mixed Call
Hey- top qutlity orchard gra1s
and clover mi•ed. •1 60 a bale
Cell 61 4-446 -4&amp;99

55 Building Supplies

Ml•ad hay for 11le Cell 614-

379 -2182.

large bel• o1' hay Can deliver
t20 Call 61.t -992 7401
500 baln of hay tor u le t1 00
per bel• Clarence Wtckllna.
Recine Oh~ 814-949-2916

Good hey for ule 614 -992 6533

814 448·2783
Utility Bldg Spl 30 'a40 ' •9'
Eave W· 15' x8' eliding door &amp;
nrv. door · 16256 ltf'ICted Iron
Horse Bldg• 614-332-9746
collect
Block . brlclr.. mortar and maaonry aupplln Mountain State
Blodl. At 33, New Hewen. W
Ya . 304-882-2222

Pets for Sale

9790
Oragonwynd Ca"II'Y Kennel
CFA Htmalayan , Persian and
Sl1mese kittens AKC Chow
pupp111 C1ll .t41 -38M ahar

81 CutleulS dl .. el. PS , PB. ttlt
whlll , AM-FM t1etao. plush
mterlor, good rubber, 111 cond
Celll14 · 388·8343 after &amp;PM
1982 Spirit, 4 spd , sunroof,
AM ·FM tope,

12,299

1980

Dodge A.pen 4 dr , auto air
vW\yl roof, wira r•m1. low mli.ge,
t2 .G9 John• Auto Selaa,
Bulavllla Rd. Glllipollt
1978 Plymouth Ytllant Scamp.
V-B, 2 doof, 318 motor, AC PS,
rtdilltlfn, tldiO Ctll614-t45 1 ~86 Pontiac Paritlenne 2 2.000
m1lea Good col'1dition Call

614·4oll·2613

448 7&lt;32

0021

Melt lan Apso 9 wHit• old
Registered w1th AKC Shots &amp;
wormed t176 Call 614 -446 -

1982 Plymouth Horil01'1" dr. 4
spd . nice, U ,399 Johl'1 's Auto
Sal... Bullville Rd . Gallipolis
Oh
1918 C1maro AM-F¥, PS. PB
t lr. auto trtnl, tilt wheel. new
tires, no ru11, gtraga kept, very
nice eer, t2 ,500 firm Cell

Black toy Poodle Femala. Ap·
prox 6 lbs . Hu blltft .peyed 1
lfl ytlrl old Good with children .
160 614 -992-2166 t1ll 5 p. m.
614 992-6189 eft. 6 p m.

614·446· 9407

Blfdl, fi1h , 1mall en1m1l1 al'1d
the ir supplltt Fish Tenll and Pat
Shop-, 2413 Jackson Aw . Poin1
Pleasant, 304-675 -2063

1978 Mutteng II Ghla 302, V-8 ,
PS, PB, auto , naw tires, lhocks ,
e•c•llent condition, U ,OOO
firm Call 614 -448 -34815

Four miniature poodle pups, two
male• . two femaiH 304-BB2·
3672

1978 AMC Concard wagon ,
con d . tully ~ulpped , .-.w
t.r ... low mnuga, 11 .600 . Call
~ood

614·446·7904

PRICE AEOUCEOII AKC Collie
puppies. 8 weeks . thorta and
wormed , 304 -6715 -3638 or

1980 Chevent, 4 dr .• Good
cond , 11700 814-985 -4418 .

57

198~ Cad Sid en OeVille. Frol'1t
wf'll drNt. Fully equipped. Ex
cellent col'1dltion. 38,000 m1l11
t14,500 or bnt rea1onabla
offer 814-9815 -3694 or 814-

61&lt;-Ue.8607.

Musical
Instruments

985·3595
Sohd upright Wllnut PllnO, ltOOI
&amp; mu11c . eac. cond t300 Cell
614-446·8175, Ilk for Jtn .

CROSS &amp; SONS
U S 36 Wnt. Jacttaon. Ohto.

614 2118 11&lt;81 .
Malley Ferguson, New Holllnd ,
Bum Hog Saltl6 Service. Over
40 uttd trtct1m to choo11 from
It co.,.,ltta line of new &amp; ulld
equ!pma1'1t lergnt aelaction ;.,
8 E Ohkl
135 MF tractor, 2 bottompklwa.
2rowMFeompl..,tlf, 3pt dl1c
13,850 Cal 514-211 -1522
930 C111 trtctor, with ctb. lOw
houre, 5 bottom semi-mounted
plow1 , 4 rvw JD com p4el'1ter.
U ,660 Cal 814· 281·1822
For sale round heybale mov1111.
ICIIIOfl lift, • e "t of 1tone
gcka Contact Br1a1'1 Windon et
Eattam High Scl'lool. 114 98153329 or any ottter Eatttm VoAg
member .

1975 Monte Cll'lo P1 pb. 1ir
Rune good Vary good cond
t850 814-992 -7139
1954 Chavy Belelra. 2 door
herd1op, lttndard, rune good
Body ftlr 1650 080 Call
814-742· 2502 .
1~7&amp; Buick Century, 5.000
mrl" on engine, body axc
" .500 00 304-882·3771
.

1974 Ford Torino, t200 00
Ctn be ..., If 8amett1 Road
phone 304-875-4373
'
1976 Corwna. 14,000 mlln.
17,000 00. Phone 304-175 6111 .,.., 15·00.
1974 Orand Torino, tilt wheet ,
PS . PB . AC . 89 .000 mil ..
tiOO 00 30"·5715·"2 10
.
1973 Mavlriek 1200.00 Phone
attar 2:00 PM 304· 57&amp; -4823

72

®l Wheel

7:35
8 :00

1979 GMC J1mmy Coactl 'v'an
23 tt. 114 245 9'48
'

·-··-·----. ..

Home
Improvements

ALLEYOOP
HOOOOBOY 1 TALK
ABOUT A SI NKING
FEELING!

BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Ul'1condlti01'1allifetlme gulran·
tM local references fum11t-ted
Free •llmates Call collect
1 -8U· 237 -048B, day or night
Rogtrl B11samant
Waterproofing

,.,ci

814·992·2772
WELL

DRilliNG
Pump 111". service Reg11tered
in Oh1o All work guarentl!led
C1ll 30.. ·273-2811 Ao\~t~enl­
wood. W Va

Makes me lie on

the floor whilehe
empties the till !

Yeah' Bo4,
was mLJ
f loor ever

dirt4!
"''"""'

Feny Tree Tr~mming , stump
removal Call 30,-676-1 331
AINGlES 'S SERVICE. upenenc.d carpenter ahtctnoen
!'"lion. painter, roofll'1g jlnclud·
mg hot tlr applicat iol'11 30.f·
675 -2088 or 1575 -7368
Sterk• T' " end Llw1'1 Sarvtce
lendecaping. 30.t-6 76 2010
Roury 01 cable too l dfllllng
Molt walls completed umeday
Pump nle1 end service 304

891·3802
Bath~om .

kitchen remodeling,
ceram1c t1le instslletion, roof~ng ,
drywall plumb11'1g, electrical. !all
phiiH ot bu1ldlng) 304-676 2440

B2

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER 'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pine
GaU1polis. Ohio
Phone I14 -446 -3BB8 or 6U-

446·4•77
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING .
Rt . 1, Bo• 365, G1lllpohs Cell

614 ·367·0576

THAR !! SEE HOW

Clark Plumbing al'1d Hett lng, 18
yftafl expenenct. UI'1Stop drail'11
N.w -ramodeling -repeir work
Pf'lo ne 304 -882 -2012

PURTV THAT LOOKS

Cell

1-814· 388·8592
3 Springing Heifer~ 2 Hoi
Hafford OIOit 1-Hol
·~··
CfOia. 114-849-2582
Pelr of 3 year old wofll oxen.

B3

Excavating

Good-1 hcevatmg , basements
tootert , dr~veweys. aept1c tanks
landtctplng C1U anyltma 614
44&amp;·4537. Jamet l Oa•mon
Jr ownllf

85

'81 4114 I · 10 M111l C1b air, PS,
auto tr1nt. AM · FMce•Mttland
'Sear• 15HP go · kart. llh new.
1976 Chry1l1r Cordob1 Call
81.t-441 -4255

· ~~~--~~~----1878 Chevv Sco"ldtle •-wo
with many e•tttl, oooct c:ond n

Chevy .t-WO . Call •ttar 7 ,

814·317·0111 .

tCODEED±

~~HA- THAT
'NEI-1.-iO- PO
/0.A 'JWA5 .

PERTAT

rJ

Now arrange the we led leH~¥S 1c
lorrn the surpr1se answer as sug
gsslea by the aoove cart oon

[j

i

r I I X:J[I]"ITJ"

Answer here

fAns l'oCIS TOmOIIO NI

Yeslerdays

I

Jumbles BE Ll E

DUCAT BR.AN CH GI:NTLE
How some peop le lea rn to dr~&gt;~ e;; c;. rBY ACCIDEN T

Answer

BRIDGE

Forum

(HI College Basketball
WISCOOSIO at IllinOiS
IHBO) MOVIE: 'Children of
the Corn'
!MAXI Comfort end Joy
B 05 CII MOVIE. 'The Secke11s'
Part2of2
8 30 0 (I)@ Fem1ly T•es Alex
ftnds h1mself tn the mtddle
o f a famtly conflict when he
secretly
InV Ites
Ellen s
father to Pa rents Da y
W eekend In Stereo
[!) Sneak Prev1ew
9:00 0 (I)® Cheers When D1·
ane secre11y has a fellow
psych ology stud ent ob
serve the Cheers reg ulars ,
they ft nd out about 1t and
swear r evenge o n her In
Stereo
(J) Families on the Faultline
@) College Beske1boll
Wake Forest at Duke
®@ The Colbys (CCI Jeff
confronts Fran cesca w1th
hts fears . and J as on forces
Sable fnto usmg ht s broth
er's letter, wh1ch w il l ex
pose Jeff (60 mtn)
0 IIl ®I Simon &amp; Simon
00 Wild Amertca
ITil Mystery: Tho Body 1n
1he L1brery (CC) Port 3 of 3
M1ss Marp le 's m stmc ts are
proven correct when a second body 1s found (60
mtn )
9:30 0 I]) ® Nigh! Coun
When Harry takes a nt ght
off. a substitute Judg e go es
berserk and 1atls th e court
staff In S1ereo
(I) Profiles of Nature
IHBO) MOVIE: ' N•ghtmare
on Elm Street'
I 0 ·00 0 (I) ® Hill Str&amp;81 Blues
Fur1llo supports a rookte
cop accused of pla c• ng a
weapon tn a d ead s us
pe ct s hand , and Htl l and
Renk o are ass1gned to the
morg ue detail (60 mm J In
Stereo
® ~ 20/ 20 ICC)
f!I !IJ Deja View
.0 IIl ®I Knoll Londmg
(CC) A new s us pec t IS
sought 1n Joshua s death , a
funou s Karen confronts
Abby, and Greg plots
-. aga1nst the Ew•ngs (60

James Jacoby

Those are
the breaks

10 RPrn .un

• t) ~

+o

+ Q 109863
SOLI Til

+ J6 53
'I' K 6 3

• Q2
+ AK 4 2
Vulnerable East-West
Dealer South
~orth

West

East

South
I NT

Pa ss

2+

Pass

Pass

Pass

Ope mng lead • ;

North Amencan ChampiOnShipS 10
Wmmpeg, we ga med 11 Interna tiona l
matchp01nts (IMPs) Smce the results
for the other SIX boards were the same
at both tables. thts deal won the match
for us. Yes. duplicate bndge team
competition tS a game of sktll, but this
deal shows that there tS still plenty of
old·fash1oned luck mvolved Sorry,
opponents
~1 ~16

NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

~

Ho.tb'&gt;\ ,,Ill.,

~

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Whl~ llt

II I 1\\ I II
13 l hol tfll

14 Spi •t'd}

12 llu h h

15 r\\ t' r.tgt

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38 .Junt' hf'( 't ll'
41 1\lf,ttltll)'
p t·rc·t· pt11 111

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45 A11gn
46 M,1lr •du
t 1nn

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48 Fonlsl1 p

!)OWN
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dMit I'

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lan)!U:l),{4'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Herr's ho~ to ~ork 1t
AXYDLBAAXR
tsLONGFELUJW
Onr letter sl&lt;!nds for another In tlus samplr A 1s u;ed
for Ute lhree I.'s, X for the tw o O's. et&lt; Smglt· it'lters.
apostrophes. the length and fonnat10n of thr words are all
hints Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTE

.(MAX)
MOVIE
' Bobby
Deerfield '
10.05 CIJ MOVIE: 'Blindfold'
10:30 (jJ) Tony Brown's Journal

1- 16

WY

l ' WVE~Il

f:l,~

( t , c)\

•

Tony B ro wn d1scusses ts-

II V r H

s ues of spec tal mt erest to
the bla ck comm u nt t'l;_

noo o m ® o

IIl QZI

ru~

f!l !Il Benny
Cil SCTV

•

WHAT WbULD HI\PPEN IF
\"'U AND I NEVER 60T
MARRIED A~D LEFT HOME?

W~AT IF 'IOU AND I 'HAD
TO LIVE TOGETHER FOR

THE REST OF OUR LIVES 7

DON'T SCARE ME LIKE
TOO J.lARD

T~AT .. IT'S

ON Ml{ HAIR'

I. A 11 1

ti

A ll ll II " &lt;I II

I l/

L~Aiilll il)ll

H W N ~
I V M T &lt;i I \
Yesterday•s CryptoquotE": SINCE ADAM AN() 1-:\'E
ATE THE APPLE. MAN HAS NEVEH REI%\I'iEii FHIIM
ANY FOLLY OF WIIIC'l l );f. WAS 1· APAilLE

Hill Show

(jJ Eyewitn111 Newa
ITil Tho Military end !he
News Media: Ghoator: A
Metter of Intelligence The
dtfftc ulties of mamta1n tng
secrets tn an o pen soctety
are di scussed (60 mm )
IAI
@ Carson's Comedy Clos
sics
IHBO) 1a1 &amp; Ten: S1ns of 1he
Quarterback One of D•ane s players faces a b1g
penalty for play •ng around

r ~ E

N A \' T

News
ill Men from U.N.C.L.E
@) College Besk01boll: A rl·

TRISTATE

R 6 M Furniture Me.,ufactunng
St Rt. 7 Crown City, Oh. Cali
614· 256 1470, call Ev• 814
441 343B
Old &amp; new
UphOitlled

• AK7
• R i'

j,{d r111t'lll

lrl t'"td UII '

[1) Newswatc h
IJ]J News

PEANUTS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

EA ~ T

WES1
• 10 9 2
• •J !I 52
t K J 10 8 3

5 Fun'\\ 11rd
I \ 'u 1111
6 Supt •rm,u• ... 6 Shtp .., l.ullllj.!
7 At &lt;tb
g.lfh

zona Steta at Oregon State

1183 Sac Ave.. Gallipolis
8U -446 -7833 or 6 14 _446
183 3
.

+J 7

by THOMAS JOSEPH
4 lt m lfl lt l
ACROSS

mm)

SNAKE!!

1-1&amp;-llli

'I' AQ IU4
t A9i 4

Today's deal Illustrates the YJCISSItudes of bndge Because the North ·
South pa1r was usmg weak no trump
opemngs, South opened one no-trump
on 13 high -card pomls East now had
an opportumty to make a l ead-d~rect·
mg double of two clubs The f1ve of
clubs opemng lead, followe d by shght
miSJudgment 1n the play, resulted m
declarer's gomg down three The biddmg by North and South cannot really
be faulted
In the replay South opened one club ,
North responded one d~amond and
South made h1s normal rebid of one
spade North btd three no-trump
whteh ended the auctiOn East wa~
now on openmg lead and selected the
10 of clubs. agam a chmce that no one
would really cnlic1ze But look at the
difference The North declarer ducked
the club around to hts Jack and next
played to the queen of diamonds West
m1ght have posed a problem for de·
clarer by returmng the diamond Jack,
but mstead played back the 10 of
spades It was now too late to keep
North from takmg nme tncks, and m
fact West, whose hand got tightened
up in the red smts. Wotind up lettmg
declarer make an overtnck.
On th1s particular deal of our team 's
seven-board Sw1ss-team match at the

day IS commemorated (60

Waugfl 'a Water Service Weill
ciltarnt, pools Faat. reliabl~
Hrvice Cell 614-258-12.t0 or
814 266 1,30 Reu o nabl•
rates

Upholstery

\ORTII

• Q3 4

By James Jacoby

m1n)
Martm Luther King The
Dream and the Oru"l The
f.rst nat1 ona l ce lebratiOn of
Mart1n lu th er Kmg 's blnh-

Kel'1 '1 Water Serv1ce Wells .
cittams, pools filled fllho1'1e
614· 387-0623 or 614 -367
7741 night or day

B7

~

®

General Hauling

James Boys Water Service Al1o
pool• ftllecl C1ll 614 -266-1 141
Of 614 -4.t6 1176 or 614 44679,1

of Fortune
Is Rtght

(H) Benson
® Sanford and Son
0 ~® Cosby Show (CCI
In Stereo
CIJ Wock1est Sh ip In !he
Army
® ~ Shadow Chasers
(CC) J ona thon and Benny
must slay a drag on to stop
a bargatn between a fem ale senatortal cand 1date
and a w1 zardress (60 mm )
fil CIJ College Beske1boll:
Auburn at Alabama
0 ® ®I Magnum , PI
Magn u m 's search for Car
ol s m•ss•ng cous1n lea ds
h1m to a pns a n farm (60
mon ) (R)
(I) MacNeil-Lehrer Newsh·
our

tiT

J end L. Installation Rooflng
vinyl lidmg, 1torm door~
w1ndows Free ettlmates Call
WATER

® ® Jeopardy

(9) Yes Mmtster

Trucks for Sale

1979 Chevv lhonbld. low ml·
leege, wry good cond., 13.800
Coli 814·4oll ·1002

Livettock

304-875-1331 .

614 742· 3118

0

814·2.,· 4292

Farm Equipment

Spri.,g..- Cows for s1le

1977 T()'fota Calica GT Good
cond . mtny new plf11 •1 160
1961 Srudeblktr. 6 cvt.. 3
apead , overdrive Vtry .. ltOfl
ble. Runs good t596 C1ll

Far111 Sup pl tes
&amp; Lt veslock

Game

rn Please Don't Eat DaiSI&amp;S

1979 Yellowstone 26h AC
elactnc or ga1 heat , full bath,
built 1n lteteo TV atanna
ewn1ng . extre ntca , co1i
110,800.00 Wlll lell .4,900 00.
Ilk for Sandy at 304 676 6564
or 814 -367 7341

2454

1977 Toyota CeUce GT . fully
loeded , 1975 Cell 614 -448 -

way
@)
Jeffersons
0 ®® Wheel of Fortune
® Nightly Busmess Report
G] Eyewitness News
G:D MacNeil-leh rer Newshour
~ Dtvorce Court
Gl• Barney M 1ller
IHBOIInslde lhe NFL
ffi Mary_ Tyler Moore
0 (I) (iJ New Newlywed

G1l Pr~ce

1988 Plymouth Valiant 6 cvt
auto .. UOO. Cell tny1imt 114

8~tut l1ul AKC Botton Terrier
pupp1es , UOO ftrm Cell 814

0706

7:05
7:30

ANNIE

2 tone 1981 Dodge Chall..,ger
uc cond Cell 6U-258 -19.t8
after .tPM

?PM

63

79 Motors Homes

-C'~LEMAN

.._~

II CIJ NewsCenter
Cil 8100,000 Name

@1 (1) WKRP m Ctnc•nnat t

RON'S Teln1sion Service
Houtt cells on RCA . Outrtr.
GE Speclallng tl'1 Zoftlth CeU
304 576-2398 Of 614 446-

4ol8 64108

61

1977 Plymouth 'Jolene parts.
tran1mluion . slant 6 eng1na 4
tir•llkenew JO.t -773-5109 or
304-882 3121

Autos for Sale

9898

8riarpetch Ktnl'1ell All breed
grooming Adults &amp; puppies
El'1ghsh Codter Spen1ela 388 .

JUMPCfFA

Services

71

r-__

m

cr.Az'l nm\0'7
e:o w~~tJ 111!W

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

81

Kentucky lu1111 . OhiO lump ,
Oh1o Stoker Yard or delivery.
cement block• and buikftng
materiel Gellipolll Block Co .
P•ne St .. Gtlhpolil. Ohio Cell

WHm D'lll05E

Transporl alion

245 -6121

1

t:J

Entertatnment Tonight
lnterv• e w wtth T 1m Con-

I"

258.8417

76

TROFY
.,... ......... J

Cil

Boats and
Motors for Sale

&amp; Campers

900 lb . rou"d bal• Orchttd
Qt'lla and etover. Quality gueran
teed . tHI .,., btle Volume
retea. Cell 814-992 -3798

Building Mltenals
Blocl , bnck, MWer pipn, wmdows hnt1l1. etc Claude Wfn·
tera, Rto Grande. 0 Call 6U-

56

75

Good mixed hay SQuare bal•
t 1 20 Ca ll 614-388 B720

K1ng wood end cotl 1tove. nc
cond t225 00 304-896 33&amp;9

400

19B3 VT 760 Shadow. 1984
V 46 Magum, 1982 650 Ntgh thawk. 1982 CB 900 cuatom
Call 614 -367-0482

John boat fo r sale Call 614 -

304-4U ·1997

Whirlpool compact auto wa1har.
4 yrs old t226 00 Hoover
compact dryer . neadawork .
•5o 00 304 876 -8504 after

Motorcycles

Hay &amp; Grain

Dryer for salt. S515 00 Phone
304-576· 2676

M11ed hardwood sltbs t1 2 per
bundle conta1n11'1g approx 1 1h
to n, fob Ohto Pallot Co , Pomeroy, Oh 614 -992 6461

TFIS 80 Model 4 COfl11Uter wit h
DMP 11 0 prmter like new
1960 614 -992 -5706

63

-=74

Sanou1 about lo11ng walgh11
Contact Gloria Gr1te Rt 2. Box
282. letert. WV 25263 304

675·4683
Black powder $5 95 Thof1'1)10n
canter guns mun le loldmg
suppl1e1 shop Koebel' I Guns &amp;
Repelr M •ll Creek Ad 1 mile oH
At. 7 , Hr1 M-F, 6 SPM Set
1-6 Call 814-446 2316

,,

glu1. Pnced to 1111 614-949 Standard 16.000 m1 . Smoked

Smell fum1thad apertment , no
peta. eduh1, reference• 304
676 -1366

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sol11 and Ch11r1 pr~ced from
t285 to t896 T1bles. t50 and
up to t126 Hide e-bads ,l390
end up to U60 , aofa beds
t145 . Reclman , t22S to
U75 . lamp1 from 12B to
1,25 pc dlnet1n from 1 109
to435 7pc 1189andup Wood
tabla With IIA chatrl S285 to
S7.t5 D11k t1 10 up to t225
Hutch•. 1650 Bunk bed cam
plata w1th m1tttts11t . t 276
and up 10 U95 Baby beds
•11 0 MtttreiUI or boa
sptlngs, full or lwtn , t83 , f~rm .
173 end Ul Queen aeu
1228 4 dr chnts, US 5 dr
chutl , 1159 Bad frames ,
UO end 126 , 10 gun . Gun
c abinet•. t350 Gu or alactnc
rang .. 1376 Baby menresses
136 I 146 bed frames 120.
126. &amp; 130. king frame 150
Good selectiOn ot bedroom
au1t11. rocker•. mttal cabmet1
headboards US &amp; up to t66

Ren lals

~~~=====---==""'==:;:==========:}_ _30~93==~';;::==;::::::

Btr, 4 1toola, Iiiia new . antique
1 IS gal stone jer Phone 30.t-

51 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

1984 Ramet-.arger 4 whl dnve

Slabs - S6 per bul'1d le wh1le they
last Call 614 -245 -6804

3 room furn11htd apartment
ground floor. privata entrance
util1t1• Included, 180 Bows.;.
St , Hander1on 1250 304675 -6730

CAPTAIN EASV

f-11.

Hide-A-Way couch With match '"• ci&gt;o" Coil614·4ol8 ·0218

63

•

1982 Dodga Aam cu1tom 1111'1
auto carpet, AM -FM 11pa, wire
r1m1. IC)Orty, t4 ,499 Jotm's
Auto Saln, Bulavllte Ad Galll ·
polls, Oh
----

Unscramble lhese lout Jumbles

The1
Tune
® O ®@@ News
fil Cil Diff'ren1 S1rokes
® 3·2· 1, Contact (CC)
® Eyewitness News
ITil Newton's Apple
@ Jeffersons
(MAX ] MOVIE : 'Ro manc tng
the Stone'
6:05 iil Andy Groffi1h
6:30 0 ~ NBC Nightly News
(]] Green Acres
®@ ABC News
fit CV One Dey at a Time
0 @ ®I CBS News
CID Doctor Who
ITil Body Elec1roc
@ WKRP tn Cmcm ~&amp;tl
@ NBC News
6:35 @ Caro l Burnett
7:00 0 ~ PM Megezme
(1) CourtShip of Eddie's
Father

r

by Henr1 Arnold and BrJb Let

one leltei!Oeach SQuare to lo rni
lour Ofdmary words

EVENING
6:00

~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~~~

THURSDAY
1/16/86

9700

5062

875 ·2635

44

0

882-2406

Mobila home lot Mowrey Up·
holstery 304-876 415•

M1n1 farm 3 bedroom•. b•u mant , barn. buildingl 1226
ln01'1th plut depot~t Call 614 986 -4106

0

\1ft\}1.\.ft 00\1

Television
Viewing

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1979 Jeep CJ 10 , lo1'1g ~heel
beta PU , "-'ad" track, 360, V-8 ,
tulo , elr, PS , PB 11idmg rear
wmdow, low mlleaga 1979
CJ -5 Golden Eagle, V-8 . 3 apd .
1poke wfleela AM -FM stereo.
low mileage Cell 614 -446 -

0

Whirlpool electriC dryer. eiiCII·
lent cond1t1on. 1126 Cell 614 -

&amp;PM

DICK TRACY

2933

73

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1977 Chew, half ton PickUp 6
cyi, tt:d. w•th top . u.c cond. one
owner. t2 000 00 304-6715

K•ng *re water b8d Bookcase
head board. wavele., mattre...
side pads &amp; manre11 ptld Call
61.t-256·6608 atter 15

C01'1d Call 614 -446 -7231 aher
Whirlpool dryer 4 yr old good

Thursday, January 16, 1986

4188

Ratrigerator IC&amp; maker, fltrvelt
gold . t260 Alf conditioner
23.000 BTU $160 Tappen 911
renge whtte, t45 New btaabotrd helttrl (2 20 I 1-10 ft
uo 00. 1 "ft 430 00, 2- 3ft.
126 Call 614 -379 -2774

992 2064

Trucks for Sale

1 963 Ford p1ck up fai r cond
$300 00 Ph o ne 30.t 676 -

Vary Sturdy couch , 80 Inch"
tong wtth lllp covefl, t35 00
304-175-1BO.t

2 bMroom uell•. reference
You PlY Ut1l1t1• Adulu 304-

2 bedroom unturn+hltd trliler.
depolrl requ.rtd. Middleport.
Oh1o 304 882-3267 or 304
773 -6024

72

Washer &amp; dryer 1et U45
Fngid11re w11her t96, gu dryer
harv81t gold 1126 Hoover
pol1able washer S. dryer 19&amp;
each G E avocado grMn dry..196, electric range 196, electric
renge K8Rmor• 30 In t1215 , gaa
tinge 30 In wf'llta t76. refrlfllerator wMe 2 dr t915 , ttfrigtrttor
2 dr . coppen.one 196, rafrigtrl tor tide by lldt 1150 Sktggl
Appli11t1ce Upper River Rd 614-

APARTMENTS , mobile homM
hou•• Pt PleetentandGaUipohe 8U-446·8221

One end two bechoom•. Sand
H1ll Aotd. 304-176-3834

3 bedroom. all alectnc. priveta
lot Gelltpolis Ferry Hud eppro~t~ed ••nt plus utilit1 .. 304
675 -40BB

Kit 'N' CARLYLE ®bJ Lllrry Wright

Household Goods

CIPPed

43 Farms for Rent

Mu•tsell1972 Schultz 1h66
7a 1 1 expand a 3 bMroom.
wood burl'1er AC . WllhM dryer .
Plr11tlly furniShed . all applll1'1
cas , 2 porches and underpel'1 nlng , ti ,SOO 00 Phon• 304-

33

2 bedroom apt In nu:uect1o" of
Middlepon 1178 par mol'11h
plus utilitill O.posh requlfld
814-992 -7177

COUNTRY MOB ilE Home Park
Route 33 , North of Pomeroy
Lerga lots Call 614 992 7479

882 2888

Financial

N.w 1end2bedroomfurnllhed
oplo .. ond hOUH in Middleport
Cell 614 992 -6304 Of 614

r:::::====--=--r:;::=;:===;=:~=~+4-:4-6-:·1_5_6_2_______

2888
11'1

efflc1ency t150 ut11it111

ptud Shere beth. 607 2nd Ave
Gelhpollt Single Call .t46:
441 6 after 7pm '

'b

51

4.8-7398

Medtcal laboratory techntClln .
A.ppty In perton betw.tn 9 •
4 .30 Mon -Frl M.cikal Plen,
203 Jeckeon Pike, Gelhpolis

Ohio

Thursday, January 16, 1986

Middleport, Ohio

llEilTRANO R\JSSELL

•
Wtth a Bulle tte

11 30

0

(I)@ Tonight Show In
Stereo
([) WKRP m Cincinnati
W Cil® ToXI
0 ® N•Qht Heat O ' B r~e n
and K1rkwood attempt to
solve a nu mbe r of recent
cop kill•~gs (60 mon) (A)

®

Au s tm CttV LtmJts: MI-

chael
Nunn

Murphy/ Gary

P.

_n ABC News N•ghtl ine
JQ lo vo Boa t
(HBOI 1st &amp; Ten· I Only
Reed Defense Dtane1ants
to cut an agtng player rom
the team

�Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Happenings in and around Meigs

Area deaths
Brian Keith French
Brian Keilh French . 30, of 61
Franklin Ave. Athens, died unex pectedly Wednesda y al O'Btcness
Hospit JI. Athens.

&amp;llurrlay at the Ewmg Funeral
Home "1th Re\'. Ste,·e Nelson
officiating. Burial will lx' in Meigs
Memory Garden. Friends may call
HI Ihe funeral hom&lt;' after 2 p.m. on
F r iti:l Y.

Born in (;rll lipolis. ht· wa~ tht' son

of Edn a :11ilk•r F'renc h Ru ssl'il uf
Middlcp011 and lht· IJ IC Ed"·ard T.
~'ren r tl . l i e ,,.&lt;:~ ..,

Hoc kin g

a _,tudcnt

Jl ttl('

port . he 1s sun iYf'd b,-,J bmthl' r ancl
sistor-m -law , :\1Jrc .1nd .Jua n1t;1

French.

Middlf'p!)l t.

-. i ~ tf'r .

.1

LuAnn E\'.111 &gt;. Mlclcl lr pOI I.

hb

gramlmmh(.'r, C1-· 1cr Fn' nt·h. two
n iect~~ . M . , ~ .m .111d .h·~sw a f-~\ · a n s .
Middl&lt;•por1, .1nd Jn ;~ u nt. .\l r~ .
Holx•rt H H\ ...t -·11. Porn 0ru~
Hr

\ \ '&lt;1 :-. t' t t'('r 'fl~ 'li

fr lthPr

in ,If' 1th h~ hi-.
:\Ll rtUn

L;L liltifdtllt~ l .

h l..,

Frr nrh . •1nd "' '\ 't'tJ I .nm t.... ~uu1

uncll':- .
f'rirn d' n:.1_,. c; \ll ,n HJ wl m);{:-.·
Cnn ts 111•:\\ i t Funt't'dl Ht1111 t' dn~· ­

!ime Ft ul t~ .'

Mildrt'd E. Carpenlt&gt;r

C ollq~ ~~ ­

l' t'c h n ll' il ;

Nelsonville.
Besides his molln and step
father. Ridwd Ru,t•ll . Middle·

Thi' Ltmi :\ wi ll IX'

pn •spnt tw m ll\' I c~ n d ~ 111 ll p m . on
Frtd;t\ Fum•t ,tl "~ ' lYt n·~ \\ dl Ut·
hrlct ,1 1 ~ p m C.:. ,ttun Lt \ u ·Ji ll tht•
Hr,· C ,\., / urJ.t-:a t&gt;tl tt:.llin~ Buri,l l
\\ iJ ] l)t' ln t! lt ' fl J\'1 ' 1'\'H'\\ l l' l11t' l f' IY

E&gt;lti II :\'1 oon•

:1-lildred EJ!een Holter Ca rpenter,
75, Medma . fmmerly of Meigs

County . died Wednesda)· al the City
Hospital in Akron .

Mrs. CarpPntPr was bom 1n
C'hrsrrr Tounship. f'- lP ig!:' Counr-y .
on Dt'C. 11. 19111. a daughtPr of the
F:rne~ t

l.nr

and

\ora Spt• n('('t'

ll nlter. .

and f11ur

This year we 're
to finding more Americans
the biggest tax refund
they have coming. What
can we find for you?

.-\ c~ ron

" '"
rc~ tl

hf' r. Mr. Zahl wa s a lso

ftH'

ht-. work m wocd

n·.:;kJ('(l on

cl . l l'l! •'

l) f

JJ

t • \\

t!. . . l(,,r•ph I

H t ~,m lt ·

\-l idd lt'J.!t H1

\\' t\ !1[\ m . .
.- \ !ln'fl l .\ (·11'- R 1r im'

ntt • \\ h-' •
.\ nt l•'l

'.I I!'

DRESSES
DRESSY AND

FUNERAL HOME

CASUAL STYLES

in g t lu ' FamilY of

REG. 59.00 TO S41.00

fridby2-4 p.m. - 1-9 p.m.
Saturday Service 2 p.m.

. 17th Anniversarv Sale
17 yea rs ago this month "we opened our
doot s for the first time . Now (thanks to you)
we are ce lebrating our 17t h year in busines,
so come in and celebrate it with us and save
like yo u have never saved before .

NEW S PC.
WOOD GROUP
h4 (on5 truction

(J.u Ch, Cho~r ,

2 End Tables,
'
Coffee Ta ble.

Lane
Recliner

PRICE

'· Joq.91
Reg.

\e ve
'11 0

SNOW
SUITS

1/3

'
E
'
s
RIG

854 Second

Gallip o lt s

CIINII I IIIIlS
fill'''' 'I ~fl '
~46 -952 3

CLEARANCE
Our entire stock of
LP stereo albums is
reduced.

PAJAMAS, SHORT GOWNS
AND ROBES.

33°/o
REG. SlO TO S49

SAVE

HURRY IN AND SAVE!

Clearance Sale
$6 70 TO $3283

PRICE

SALE!

I

WINTER

:

Heavy weight large 24 by
48 inch size. Good
selection of solid colors.

'

CLOTHING :
30 TO 50°/o ·

$299

MATCHING
HAND TOWELS ...................... $2.29
MATCHING
WASH CLOTHS ...................... $1.39

OFF

MEN'S 519.95

Clearance!

MEN'S WESTERN STYLE

·WRANGLER
JEANS

MEN'S

FLANNEL
SHIRTS

FREE
FURNITUR E

WINTER
SLEEPWEAR
LONG GOWNS, LONG ROBES,

OFF

GET ONE

FREE

ALBUM

JANUARY "DUNDEE" S4.95
COATS- &amp; CLEARANCE; BATH TOWELS

$1299

--BUY ONE '
LAMP

WOMEN'S

CHILDREN'S

Pre washed blue denim,
100% cotton. Waist sizes
29 to 42; lengths 30 to 34 .
Special price.

$1999

~ :i:~~~.

LITTLE GIRLS'

BLOWER
BRIAN KEITH
FRENCH

\ \ ,1~ nc

\ tl. tm r ;n ,' n. r ,-.\ tn
~ 'h.H It"·· f ~u-..h \\ 1:n1 ,1

feel wC'·rr

RAWLINGS-COATS

'·' ·t."

i )l~ il . i~' £.:1· "

" \\'l'

rr:===========tl

.1n ·

] lorn !!'\ \ \\'_\ ..1: r. P' l!1 i! 'l'\l~

r&lt;lll,b;t'fllf'nl s.

Bitont r repo11ed l\' r~p11~&lt;1 "II" ' ,, ' au e\W lli('(ll o oppose
~' &lt; ' rn Riffe'"

"f ' rl

-\d ll1b' l' ' n "

Hr

A.\'enu.:- in

quitr a ff'w studrnt.s."
.·\ ' k'~ " 'h' hr "·ouldn N ight the

PARKING

~

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday. January 17, 1986

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

By BOJniOEFLICH
Sentinel staff writer
Steps lor selling the Pomeroy Junior High School,
the nearby Marauder football field and parcels ln
Rutland were made when the Meigs Local School
Dlstrtct's Board of Education met In regular session
Thursday night.
Supt. Dan E. Morris reported there Is a Interested
buyer lor the junior high school bulldlng and the
property on which It sits, but tllat the buyer Is not
Interested In the rest of the property In Pomeroy
which includes the football field. However, Supt.
Morris indicated tlle potential buyer feels he could
Interest another buyer In the properiy which Includes
the lleld.
Durtng a discussion on the sale of the property,
board president Rohert Snowden pointed out that
previously properties of the district have been given
for a token $1 Ia Middleport, Rutland and Pomeroy

Villages and Indicated that it has been agreed that no
more property owned by the dlstrtct is to be given
away.
Snowden pointed out the district has a need for
money and said he Is anxious to have the recreation
facilities at Meigs HighSchool completed. He spoke of
the need for a new bus garage In the dlstrlct Indicating
that money will be needed for those developments.
Snowllen reported there are parcels In Rutland
which also should be. sold.
.
Asst. Supt. James Carpenter pointed out that
surveying of the property should be done so tllat the
purchaser wUI be aware of property boundrtes.
The board voted to have the surveying done and
advertise the properties In Pomeroy and Rutland as
soon as possible for sale at public auctions with the
boarrl reserving the right to accept or reject all bids. It
was stipulated tllat If tllere should be any delay in

getting some of the Pomeroy and Rutland properties
surveyed each piece should be advertised separately
just as soon as the survey _work is done In each
Instance.
Salary adju!&amp;ments
The board moved Into a 10 minute executive session
when a request for salary adjustments was presented
from tlle principals of the district. The prtncipals
following a meeting on tl1e matter had requested an
Increase of $3,950each to cover the period from Jan. I
to Aug. 1, this year. Supt. Morris sald that tllls Is the
same dollar Increase which teachers had been given
and tllat unless raises were given to principals, a
teacher with maximum training and maximum
experience would be earning more money than
principals. Supt. Morrts also pointed out that the
elementary ,principals work 2211 days compared to 1&amp;1
days worked by a teacher.
Durling a discussion on the raises, Barton said that

78 percent of the district's money Is going for salaries
and that he felt tlle board must draw the line agalnst
tl1ree and four thousand dollar salary increases.
"We must get things in line and proper
prospective," he commented.
Powell commented he felt the distrtct should pay
the admlnistators more tllan teachers and tllat a
slgnHicant raise was In order so tl1a I the
administrators would earn more than teachers and
Powell made a motion to pay the $39;j) req uested .
However, tlle motion died for lack of a second. The
· boarrl then moved Into executive session alter which
they returned to the meeting room and passed a
motion given elementary priincipals and the assistant
high school principal a raise of sum from Jan . 1 to
Aug. I and the high school principal was given an
increase of $1500. All four board members on hand
voted in favor of that lncreaSl'.
1Continued on page 121

Rep. Boster says
bill will boost
Ohio coal usage

kno~n

C&lt;UY ing .

~luU X' rt'\

quntr&gt;d " " .. ; , ~· l n g

\ OU lO!h J\ H \ ' lh .l l! ft&gt; pl' t"i 'l'\t ' !' l fWt'

nm

Pomeroy, Ohio .
Open 9 AM·6 PM Weekdays, 9·5 Sal Phone 992·3795
NTMENTS AVAILABLE

r(nniiQU[~ trnm page l '

~10po«l l.

' r1u . bu r .\

i

618 East Main Street

Ponwro.\
llw E ~•- ml! F'unt•ral Homt' is in

Onr· n .t'nd :.... , rri thf' H 1n l t~. m rlt'
Co!lt ·..:!t' ltt,,ml r •t rru' it"-'' JH l '"' ·nr

· ·~\ t' H un·r 11 1..:111

I

FIRDA BIGGER REFUND.

hu&gt;pit ;illled. ,Eles idPs bei ng

l..'l' Jn~ to lo ~r

h ti J"t tht•

wnu •ou AIIERICANS

\q •l l knov.11 111 thf' rom munity as a

un r'f]U i\'t ( ', l nt •t ''t'' l} 'U bl lt• rTlt' 's;_t ~! l ' .. th.l' 1h, • hill mu ' t bt• p. t"-"\"(l

!l!~'l ·'·.lllt&gt;~ l,!

r'

iiioi;..;;.;;.;:~:.;;:;.;;;,::,:

.\ Irs. Lro Sm ith in Michigan when
ilt' O.•c amr ill rH rJ~ · th l.;; month and

College need

\

"Couldn 't Ptaue done it without youl "

l ', 1lum hta Std tio n ( 'pmrtf'l;.·

Mr. ;.,hi llad been \'is iting his
'-'l •n m-law ;md daught e r. Mr. a nd

1\

al/-you-ca!l-eott£r:~t0~~1a3Buffet!"

'&gt;&lt;'J'\'i&lt;'&lt;'S wi ll lx' held at .l p.m.
Tr~da y a 1 the Waitt' and Son
f-~ u m • r, t ! Hnrnl'. i't):i \'o11h C'OU!1 St.,
.\ lrd m,t. Bun ~1 l 'd ll be in thr

en tine

takes steps to sell properties

b ked potato plus
Every dinner includes a ~ t Spot" and the

niPces

_l.rt't~ at

at y

.:,p~1lres;:: .

Section , , 2 Pages

Voi.J6, No. 191
Copyrighted 1986

IJ.1shan: four .1unt s among \-\-' hom is
:-c &gt; ~ · .

•

e

A Meigs Counly man suffered
minor injuries in a single- vehicle
accident on Meigs Cou nty 19
Wednesday night. accorrling to the
Gallia-Meigs post of the State
Highway PatroL
Bruce W. Blackston, 27, of Rt. 3.
Pomerov. was westbound on 19,
about sL,·tenths of a mile west of
U.S. 33, when troopers said he
allegedly lost control of ills pick-up

Hat II&lt;' 'ipr n&lt;'cr [·'m:lcrick of PomP·

i\k '(ll't' f l, · ',l', l .... , t ·,, lt 'I,Hl t•l \\'ur ld

t n~ll l LJ Trt

Meigs motorist hu
in traffic accident

1{i ffi&lt;'. F:agle Ridge: two nephews.
R c;,,r\' ,Jnd Gordon Holter,

\\ ' cdm•st.:ia ~ C'H'ning at a hospital in
H~ ·tTif'n Splings. Mi ch.

,\1 '[ LJI'"d r\ " ..., u h_ P !lHll\tlt ., , t'lt \1 1'

l

bid Stdfion. cmd Sharon Holt er

J...: ~ . ,I ~tl tl l)f I ht'
t d n iHP l~ · ll u td

lie c:l lk d }{ Jt It ' ... p_. . n~n r '-'h lp · ,m

.;

World's BtggtS ' ""

Aaron Z. Zahl

WM I I .111d .1 nwm t• •t trl the· \ "bll n
Mrthodis1 t hu: t 11
SU I'\' 1\",Jl);.! , II t ' Ill ... \\ tk . .\l .!rT h,\
Ft·r tPII \h_-.. !11
1j :-I.... rt•l \l.1n
.\1.1.\ lnt · H.ult '') \,~11\ .! \\ \ '.t
,l!ld "' ' \! '!'.! ; nH-...'! '- .tlld ll t'!J hi' H ....
r~ .. \(~~' " ~ ~ ·, p, l i t 'nl ... . 11,· \' .! "
prN"fld('li :n clt'.ll lt tJ\ •hn·c bJoth
l' I'S. Er nd. lll 1--\ollPrT dnd H.J \-dt' n
\l oon ·
~ ' I ' It , ., \ \ i d t11 !W id .t ! ~ p.nl

was nol trealed, troopers said.
Blackston's pick-up sustained mod·
erale damage and he was charged
by tllepatrolwithfailure tocontrol.

County Common Pleas Court from
Audrey Arnold, Pomeroy , on
grounds of gross neglect of duty .

O. •lort"s Grff'n Uing. Colum-

12Pke1 Zalll. long-tlmc
I' o !llCI'O)' Hi gh School t Parh~r. died

tng . .... \ HI t~l•'

Meigs County Emergency Medi cal Service rt'ports five calls
Wednesdav; SvracuSl' at 8: 14a .m.
to Church. Sl. ·for Estill Moore to
Veterans Memoria l Hospital: Middlepon at 8: lti a.m . to Bradburv
Rd. fo r Freda Clark who was
lrea ted bu l not transported; Middlepon a t 9:32 a. m. transponed
Freda Clark to Holzer Medical
Center: Middiepo11 at 3:38 p.m. to
1689 Lincoln Height s for Dorothy
Wya tt to Veterans Memorial Hospital: Tuppers Plains at t07 p.m. to
Rl. tiffi East for Keith Harris to
Vewrans Memorial Hospiial.

by a brorhrr.
sislpr-in -law .
.\1;1 n · h:J thryn Hol trr. Basl1an: two

I-:.'. I ll! \ loon•. 7..j . "\~ r. t l'u ~ · . d trd
dl hi s ]lOnl t · \\'t '( ]IH'-...d ,l\
(\ l'f'ti n"t i L'Il&gt;t'i li L'ia n. Mr. :\loo rr
~;~; a~ 1'1\ .' J'n d I f- ',lilt~ .
lat C' l'bom.l' c~ n d

'"a cu•w. ~&lt;~ent off the lefl side of
Emergency squads Divorce granted
Ihe road and overturned .
Gerald V. Arnold. Pomeroy, has
su ffered mJ~or injuranswer five calls · been granted a divorce ill Meigs iesBlackSion
in the 8:50 p.m. accident , but

~hP ts sutYi\'Pd
AtYil Holter. and
n lfx-.~_, ,

Thursday, January 16, 1986

WINTER JACKETS
Good selection of regular 'and
extra large sizes. Leather and
suede jackets, denims, poly
cotton blends. Regularly '2 9.95
to '15 9.95

S. M. L, XL Sizes plus tails
and bigs to 4X. True western
styling. Plaid patterns. Well
known makes.

SAVE 33°/o

SAVE 33°/o

'29.95 JACKETS .... .. .. Sale 120 .00
' 59 .95 JACKETS .... .... Sale ' 40 .00
'89 .96 JACKETS .. ...... Sale 160.00
'169 .9S ~ACKETS ... Sale '107.00

' 14.95
'16.95
' 19.95
1 22.95

ELBERFELDS

WESTERNS ........ '10.00
WESTERNS ....... . ' 1L30
WESTERNS ........ ' 13.30
WESTERNS ...... .. ' 15.30

Elhtfeldt

.. "' ..."'•.

Recently approved House legislation "puts in place the voter-approved
system Ia find an efficient, clean way to use Ohio's coal - and maintain
Ohio's coal industry -In the 1990's and beyond," says Rep. Jolynn Boster,
D-Galllpolls.
The legislation- designed to make available up to $100 mllllon In loans
and grants for research and development In new coal technologies- was
approved Wednesday by the Ohkl House of Representatives.
House Bill 750 Implements State Issue 1, which was passed
overwhelmingly by Ohio voters last November.
"Ninety-five percent d Ohio's electricity Is generated by bumlngcoal,
but becauSl' of the high sulfur content of Ohkl coal. the state hasn't been
able to take full advantage of the vast resources &lt;1 coal here in Ohio," said
Boster, a co-~nsorof the bill. "That'swhyStatelssuelandHouseBW 750
are so exciting."
The blll au tllorizes the director of the Ohio Coal Development Office, with ·
tlle advice'of the Coal Technical Advisory Committee- both of which were
created by the General Assembly last session- to make loans and grants
to businesses, as well as scientific and educatlonallnstltutlollS k&gt;cated In
the state.
The funds wUI be used for research and development !X'Olects to J1"0nlOte
the discovery of new technologies and toward the expansion of existing
methods lor using Ohio coal In a safe, clean manner.
The funds for the loans and grants wUI be raised through the lssuanre of
general obligation bonds by tlle Ohio Department of Development.
The blll allows the state to share In any royalties or profits tllat result
from tlle discoveries or Inventions of the state-funded projects. Other
provisions in the bill give the Public Utilities Commission oversight ri coal
research projects undertaken by utlllty companies In order to protect
rate-payers; and , at t11e same time, to encourage Investment In coal
research by the utllltles.

Teenager, alleged rape victim
A Middleport teenager was allegedly raped late Thursday even·
lng In Gallla County.
Paul Gerard, ~peclallnvestigator
for the Meigs County prosecutor's
office, reported that he and Sheriff
Howard Frank did the Initial
Investigation after it was reponed
by Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The girl was taken there lor
treatment and then later refer red to
the Holzer Medical Center for
further examination.
Gerard said It was first believed

the Incident occurred ln Meigs
County. Audio-tapes, photographs,
and statements have been turned
over to the Ga!Ua County Sheriff's
Department In Gallla County where
the Jnvestlgallon Is continuing.
Gallla officials were not available
tllls morning to release delalls of
tlle Incident.
The Investigator said the alleged
suspects Involved were not juveniles and that only one was actually
involved In the rape.

OOIIII'ES'IED - About 00 residents from the Rt. 143 - Ball Run
ga&amp;hered 1bursday ai lhe courthouse to contest the issuance r:l a Cl-C2
license for beer and wine carry out to D&amp;B Qulckslop on Rl. 143. Those
giving testimony In the hearing conducted by James Leon olthe stale
Department ol Uquor Control listed several objeclloM to the Hcense.
Main objeetlom were the bad curve on which the carry-oot 6 bmled
and the lad &amp;here Is anolherCliJTY-&lt;lllt within me quarter mile of D&amp;B's.
ln addlllon, members of the Wesleyan Holiness Church objected to the

the elderly and the disabled.
Under pressures of the GrammRudman balanced· budget Jaw to
lower the deficit to $144 billion from
Its current level of more than S200
bllllon. Reagan reportedly plans to
submit more than $50 bllllon in cuts
overall.
Whlle Reagan Insists he will meet
the budget targets by cutting costs,
Senate Democratic leader Robert
Byrd said Thursday the president
will have to propose new taxes or
"deep, deep cuts" In the military
spending, or both.
Byrd, D-W.Va., said Reagan
must take the lead on taxes because
"he Is tlle one person who can get
across that the dellclts are .serious
and may lllvolve medicine that Is
not sugar-Coated .... "
Included In the draft health
budget are proposals to:
-Freeze hospttaltnsurance pay·
ments, or at the most grant a 2
percent .Increase (not enough to
cover Inflation) .
-Institute a Medicare
"voucher" system to allow recipIents to purchase individual health
Insurance and todelayellglblllty for

Jones were present on behalf of the county coiiiiTilsslon which
submllled the license request to the stale on behalf r:l the applicant,
Daniel Ralrden. The conunlsslon forwarded several letters and a 100
name petition opposing the llcensetolheslale. Yesrerday'shearlngwas
then scheduled by the slate board. The hearing otrlcer said he would
have a decision within lour w six weeks.

Ohio could lose .millions in federal aid
CLEVELAND (UPI) - OhiO
stands to lose 4.3 percent of Its
federal aid for a variety of social
programs, educatkln and highways
H the first wave of Gramm·
Rudmann budget cuts takes effect
on March I, the Cleveland Plain
Dealer reported today.
The loss to Ohio could run In the
tens of millions of dollars for the
seven months between March 1and
Oct. I, 198i.

"1hls Is just the tip of the
Iceberg," said Sen. John Glenn,

JJ.Ohio, who predicted more than
$70 billion would have to be
trimmed from the 1987 federal
budget to meet the Gramm·
Rudman target.
Using figures from tlle National
Governors Association and the
National Conference of State Legis·
latures, theSta teofOhlo's Washington office estimated the cut In
actual federal spending In the
Buckeye Statecould be as low as $30
mUllan.

Reagan revives proposed
cuts in Medicare, Medicaid
WASHINGTON (U Pli - The
fiscall987 spending proposal President Reagan submits to Congress
next month wUI reconunend virtually the same Medicare. ami
Medicaid cuts la\&lt;1llakers rejected
last year, a . draft of next year's
health budget reveals.
The draft budget, disclosed by
congre5slonal sources Thursday,
proposes Ia Increase the amount
Medicare recipients pay for doc·
tors' care to cover 35 percent of the
cost of the program by 1991. It now
covers 25 percent.
Reagan's proposal also would
limit federal Medicaid costs by
turning the bulk of the program
over to tlle states.
Reagan's draft budget for health
programs was drawn up In December but Is unUkely to change
~ry much by February, when the
president submits his fiscal year
1!1'17 budget to Congress, congressklnal soun:es said.
Medicaid, a federal-state program, helps pay healtll care costs
for the needy, aged and handicapped. Medicare Is a federal
health care Insurance program for

license becau.se of the close proldmlty of the d1Urch parking lot and the
carry-out. Prooeculmg Attorney Rick Crow and Commissioner Rich

A separate calculation by Fiscal slashed by nearly $1 million and
Planning Services, a financial funds to educate disadvantaged
consulting finn In Washington, put children could be reduced s.Ji9.00l.
the loss In certain entitlements at the newspaper said.
, Christine Hoffman, spokesman
more than $39 mlllion In Oh Ia.
Glenn said 10 Ohio defense for the Ohio Department r:t Human
projects would lose money . In all Services, said programs such as
$l2l,IXXJ would be puiled back from day call', foster care counseling,
Ohio defense Installations, with adoption, and United Way Sl'rvices
Wright -Patterson Air Force Base would be affected .
Federal revenue sharing funds in
near Dayton expected to be hit tlle
Ohio are expected to he cut from
hardest.
The stale of Ohio estimated the $189 mJIUon to $2i million.
The student loan fund also would
loss In highway funds would run ln
the millions. The Home Energy be affected . David H. Harmon.
Assistance Program to help poor executive di rector of the Ohio
people meet \\1nter heating bllls Student Loan Commission, said
could face a $4.8 million rut, and the fees paid by students 10 get the
Headstart program may lose loans would be Increased from 5
percent to 6 percent of the amount
$830,00&gt;.
Job training funds may be borrowed.

HEAP deadline approaches

Medicare untll tl1e first full tronth
after tlle recipient's birthday.
-Limit the costs of the Medicaid
program by reimbursing states
only for "medically necesssary
services."
-Restrict the federal Medicaid
payment for educational and vocational services for the mentally
retarded l)lld require a second
opinion on surgery.
MORE CUTS SOUGiff All ri the recommenda tlons were
President
Reagan reoommends
Included In Reagan's fiscal 1986
the
same
Medicare and Medibudget but practically none was
caid
cuts
lawmakers rejected
adopted by Congress.
last
year
bt
his latest draft of
Instead, Congress merely exnext
year's
health
budget. UP!.
tended , through March 15 the
existing freeze on Medicare reim·
bursements to hospitals.
"What the administration Is Gramm-Rudman triggers autoproposing Is to shift these costs to matic spending cuts to meet the
the elderly under the mistaken . deficit target.
However, the law protects Medinotion tllat old people can absorb
caid
from any cuts under the
these costs," said Rep. Henry
automatic
procedure lpld llmlts
Waxman, D-Callf., chatnnan ri the
Medicare
cuts
to 1 perren t House Energy and Conunerce
those
who
favor those
meaning
subcommittee m health.
health
programs
would
be better off
The new law gives Congress a
letting
Gramm-Rudman's
autochanre to agree on legislation to
matic
cuts
take
effect
rather
than
reduce the dellcit to $144 billion In
attempt
to
avoid
them.
1~1 1987. But If they fall,

·~·····

( MOO OI ~ lt l

POMEROY 992-3(171

'

Meigs resident have only two
more weeks In which is sign up for
'HEAP, tlle home heating assistance program.
Senior Citizens Center staff ad·
viso.' that the deadline is Jan. 31.
Applications as well as personnel to
help fill out tlle fonns are available
at the Center. Asslst!nce Is based
on Income, $7,875 In a houSl'hold
witll one person, and $10,575 In a
househOld of two.
Besides the regular HEAP funds,
there is some Emergency HEAP
assistance available with tilt&gt; dead·
tine for that helng Aprllll. This help
must be applied for. however, at !he
Community Action Office on the
ground Door of tl1e courtllouse In
Pomeroy.
In addition to assisting with
applications for heating assistance,
personnel at the Center wUI also
have slgnup for homestead exemption, a reduction In real estate taxes
for those 65 years or age or totally
and pennanently disabled .
Residents may sign upm the first
Monday of any month tllrough
Jmte. Guidelines specify thai the

applicant mu st own the home as of
Jan. 1 in the yearol application, and
that it must be the place of
residence. Income must not exceed
$15,(01 for the preced ing year for
the applicant . Total income Includes the lrtoome or the owner as
well as the spouse Pven though the
spouse may not actually be an
ow~r .

As for other programs, the Social
Security represmtative wUI be at
the Center next Wednesday, and
then again on Feb. 5 and 19.
An attorney provided through the
Area Council oo Aging wUilx' at the
Center Thursday. Appointments
are to be made through Leafy
Chasteen, m -2161.
A blood pressure cllnlc will be
held Wednesday at the renter from
9:30 to 11 :30 with the next one to
follow on Feb. 20.
Again this yea r the Health
Malntenant:P Program sponsored
by the Holzer Medical Center and
Holzer Clinic, Ltd. will continue
with programs to be scheduled
every other month beginning In
January .

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