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                  <text>Pomerov-Middleport, Ohio

•

at y

e

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We r1on't r~ait once a year
to say thanks, we'll say it
and show it, each time
you come in!

Vol .36, No. 226

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer

Although services to abused and neglected children
in Meigs County have been improved, ttl' Meigs
County Aliliance for Children feels those services
could be Improved upon even further.
Child abuse and neglect statistices for Meigs
County have shown a 400 percent rlS£' in reported
cases in 1982·1984 according to a written reporl from
the Alliance to the Meigs County Commission. The
Alliance's projected estimates of total number of
abuse&lt;l and neglected children ln Meigs County,
based on 1984 population figures. range from 1,100 to
3,600.
Commissioners Richard Jones, Manning Roush
and David Koblentz , mf'('ting Wednesday in regular

session. reviewed the reporl .
It was noted that the rise in Meigs County statistics
reflects a nationwide trend . The numbe r of
"substantiated " abuse and neglect r-eporls have also
seen a similar rise according to the Aliliance.
The Alliance is attlibuting the .rise in county
statistics, at least in part, to improved recording and
intervention procedures by the loca l Df&gt;partment of
Human Services. The Alliance commended the
department for the improvements. but noted that the
substantiation rate /the ratio of subslantiated cases
compared to reported cases). which nationally in 1984
was 50 percent, is only about 11 per·cent in M e i~:s
Countv. The Alliance feel s thesc figures indicat e that
some children continue to "fall through the cracks in
the services' delivery network. The Alliance furttl'r

spending bill
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Rhodes slams
Celeste again

WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS/
'

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COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!) -The into suspected fraud and other
Ohio Senate has voted unanimou sly crlml'S wilhin the system of grou p
for a $Z1.2 million package to beef homes for the mentally retarded .
up communications and legal
The bill contains a special $3.6
proleclions and remedies for pa· mlllion allocated for Soulhwest
tients in Ohio's group homes and Ohio Developmental Center at
institutions for the mentally Batavia, the sou= of major
retarded.
problems which resulted in a
The bill, sponsored by St&gt;n. David legislative investigation las! year.
L. Hobson, R-Springfield, was sent
It also provides$7 mUlion to offset
Wednesday to the House, where an anticipated shortfall in Medicaid
similar legislalion already is under funds for patients, $1.8 million for
consideration.
county boards of mental retarda·
Former state Rep . Robert D. tion, $1.25 million for case manageNettle, [).Barberton, was sworn
ment services, $1.7 million for
into the Sena te for an interim term. addil lonal staff at developmental
replacing the iate Sen. Marcus A. centers, and $1 million for mainteRoberto, D-Ravenna.
nanre work al the developmental.
NNtle. 61, took the oath of office centers.
from Chief Justice Frank D.
William J . Shkurli, director oft he
Ce!ebrl"lze of the Ohio Supreme state office ci Budget and ManageCourl aft~r his selection by the ment, said growth in the state's
14-member Senate Democratic
revenues wUl permit financing of
caucus.
ttl' !ian to upgrade services for the
He will have 10 run in November mentally retarded. He said the
for the remalrling 1wo years of Medicaid money wlll come from a
Roberto's term In the :18th District favorable federal audit finding.
encompassing Portage and south·
Meanwhile, the House passed ,
em Summit cou nties.
7:&gt;-15, and sent to the St&gt;nate a bill.
Hobson's package includes a !l&gt;posed. by animal lights groups ,
patIents' bill of rights, a toll· free perrnitt ing the use of bucking
hotline to report concerns to the straps on work animals, SU('h as
Department of Mental l«&gt;lardallon .horses and buUs I hat perform in
a nd Developmental Disabilities, rodeos.
and an ombudsman In ttl' Ohio
Rep. Walter D. McClaskey,
Legal Rights Service to field R-Marion, a veterinarian. held up a
complaints and investigate tl'f2m .
long ll'a ttl'r belt encased in wool ·
It also fumistl's $:!10,00) for a like mat('l'ial in speaking on ttl' !ill.
special state investigator to. look

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Former Republican Gov. Jamt'S A.
. Rhodes , firing a double shot a Gov.
Richard F. Celeste, said the
governor has "taken the state back
to 1915" and ~ "callously insensl·
live" to the neEds of the,mentalJy
re!arded,.
'
Rhodes spoke at a legislative
conference of the Ohio ~soclatlon
of Realtors Wednesday morning,
wlille at the same time his
campaign office issued a• news
release contalnb)g the charges
about conditions for mentally retarded people.
The news release said abuse of
residents &lt;~I Northeast Ohio Developmentai Center is continuing
more than five months after Celeste
promised to st9P It,' and Celeste
should have !Ired an Institutional
staffer aceused of beating a patient
!ale last month.
"This is eno,ugh to dlsq~
anybody from being governorrl the
state of Ohio," said Rhodes...
"Celeste doesn't seein to under·
stand that the care of these less
fortunate citizens IS a sacred trust.
He appears to be more Interested 1n .
cov('l'ing up abuse than In ending

retarded.
Brown said his agency has been
adding staffers at three NEODC
facilities, and is conducting increased t!Jiinlng of staffers.
Brown 151!ld !he staff member at
the BroadVIew branch of the
NEODC was suspended for 20 days
Instead d being fired . "The 20 days
was. under the condil klns. the most
severe penalty we could give and
feel confident It would be sustained
(in an appeal)," he said.
Rhodes told the realtors he will
prt'Sent a package of 10 to 15
improvements In state government
Within the next 15days, but declined
to revea l any of ttl' rroposals.
"We need to get some rrograms.
We dOn't have anything oow,"
Rhodes said. "We're back lh 1975
and this adminiStration set the state
·back."
He also promised todoawaywlth
. the tangible personal rroperty tax I(
elected to a filth term, but he said II'
would not replace It with any other

tax. .

CREDIT WRONG - Garry
E. Hunter, RepubllciUI ca~nll·
dale for the 94th district says
Jolynn Bosler shoald not t!lke
credit lor the Campaign Ethics
BUI recently passed by the Ohio

Senate.

Exxon repays
overcharges
COLUMBUS. Ohio !UP! l - The
state of Ohio todav received a $79
million check from the Exxon Corp.
to comprnsat(' for customf'r over·
charges during the 1970s.
Attorney General Anthony J.
Celebrl"ll£' Jt·.. who presmted the
check to Gov. Richard F. Celeste.
said the company paid af1cr lhe
U.S. SupremeCout1refuse&lt;l to hear
Exxon's appeal of a lower court
order. Ohio's share is 3.6 percent &lt;i
a natiom,;de settlement.
C~i este dil'('Cted that the money
be put to work Immediately on fiv e
specific energy-related programs.
which he said are being cut by the
Cramm-Rudman-Hollings legisla·
lion passed by Congress.
"The sooner we can put this to
work for energy conservation, the

l:rtter;" said the governor.
The money will go for en~rgy
conservation programs. helping
low·incomr Ohioans pay their
utility bills and wcattl'rize their
homes. reducing energy costs for
schools and hospitals, and dlsst&gt;mi·
nating information on energy
conservation.
A public meeting is scheduled fo r
March 15 to develop a plan for using
the money .
Celeste said President Reagan's
proposed budget would eliminale
four oot of the llve programs,
keepin g only home energy assistance for the poor.

'

,

"The cainpalgn basically Is going

to be Jolrl, seUing real e~tate and
getting places !or businesses togo.''
Rhodes said.
11."
RepublicWI candidate Sen. Paul
Robert E. Brown, director of til' Pfeifer rl Bucyrus spoke to . the
state Depanment of Mental Retar· · rea.ltors Tuesday and Senate Pres!·
dation and Oevclopmental DisabUl· dent Paul GUlmor of Port Clinton,
ties and a Republican, said Celeste
the third candidate for governor,
has been "very supportive" and addresse&lt;l the rea ltors before
sensitive to the needs of the Rhodes Wednesday.

believes lhal increase&lt;l diligence in 0\ildrrn's
Services. where the repons arr received and
invesligalions are iniliaied, will improve lhe klcal
figures.
Although I here has been an increase In funding 10
Children's S&lt;&gt;rvices and the Departmem of Human
Services utilized 78 percent of available slale fund s in
fiscal 19&amp;1, lhe Alliance noles thai approximalely
$43 ,!XXJ of lhP slalc monies and more than !ll.OOJ of
county funds for chlldren were left unspent . The
Alillance believes thls money should be util ized to
further improve services to county childrPn .
It was also noted that Human St&gt;rvices in the past
year has increased staffing in Children's Services,
improved procedures for accepting and investigating
child abuse report s and improved services lo ch ildren

in Iosier care and adopli,·e silualions
Therrpo11 also nol£'&lt;l I ha t &lt;'floris ha,·r l.(•Pn mad e in
lhe past year 10 form a nelwork of ag encies 10
improve lhe dPi iwry of servin•s lo children. The
All iance encourages developmPnl or I his "clu sler
~:roup ," headl'Cl by IJw dtrcclor of I he O.,partmcnl of
Human Sen·ices.
•
As a first slep to providin g ongoing communily
involwmenl in Children's S&lt;wices and other
O.,parlment of Human St&gt;rvices acti,·iltrs , the
Alliance is encouraging county cornxissioners lo
establish a "working" WelfarP Advlsorv Board as
mandated by tho state. The Alliance belie,·rs !his to
be a crucial step tn mcrrasmg public awareness and
involvement.
tConlinued on pa ge 12t

GOP candidate Hunter says Boster
should not take credit for ethics bill

$21.2 million

LB.

25 Cents

A Multimed ia Inc . Newspaper

Report reveals rise in child abuse

Senate okays

LB.

2 Section s. 16 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 6, 1986

Copyrlghled 1986

Wide Selection at Great

99

en tine

I."'K£S DOUBLE SALVO -

James

Fonner 10vemor
A.
Rhodes, nmnlnr; a~~ If he t.s lhe
GOP nomination wnpped up,
slammed Go\'. Richard' Celeste
pollical pollcle!l again Wedne&amp;
day. (Flle photAI).

Rep. Jolynn Boster. D·Caltipolis,
should not take credit for the
Campaign Ethics Bill recenlly
passed by the Ohio House. accord·
lng to State Repres.•ntat ive candidate Garry E. Hunter.
Hunter is running fort he Republi·
ran nomination to the 94th District
seat in the Ohio House of Representatives, currently held by BosiN.
While Bosler is chairman of the
House Elhirs and Standards Com·
mittee and is the bill's official
sponsor. Hunter said a Columbus
newspaper reported the version
forwarded from the committee to
the full house was a compil ation of
proposals drafled by "the Ethics
Commission. Gov. Richard F.
Celeste's oflice and Rep . Ben Rose,
R-Lima."
The bill, Hunter said, "is the
direct rt'Sult of public pressure to
end the practice Gov. Celeste
allegedly engaged in duling his first
term election camapaign of receiv ·
ing a consulting fee from his
campaign commiltec."
The bill is currently being studied
by the Senate State and Local
Government Committee.
The bill, Boster says, outlines
specific uSPS of campaign finances
and closes a "huge hole" in the

current conflict of int erest stat ute
for public e,mployces. It will ·
"clarify Ohio ethics laws and
incorporate many of thl' other
ethics and campaign finan ce bills
that have been introduced, " she
said. "It would prohibit lhl' artiw
usc of public money by an
officeholder 10 get something for
himself."
The "huge hole" is contain('(] in
eurrent law thai sets fori h rules
against an atlempt to actively usc•
an official posit ion to receive
anything of value which the em·
ploy"" would oot ordinarily recehl\
Boster said. Public officials. she
said, can cun·enlly get around that
by not mal&lt;ing a specific tl'&lt;JUPst.
The measure would make the
wording clearer by applying the
words "purposely or knowlingly' ' to
describe ttl' atlempt at gaining
something of ,·alue, and it would
broaden the provision by making tl
an offenS&lt;" no matter who gained.
The bill also prohibits politicians
from receiving "walking-around "
money from the campaign fund and
personal or non-pol il ical use of
campaign funds.
The candidate wil l also oot be
able to pay the staff of a privat e
office, home utility bills or other

personal f'XpE'nS('S, suc n as cam -

paign consult arts. with campaign
money. HmvC'Vt'r. t•xceptions for

the expense of social furctrons that
candidates arr invited to tx&gt;cauSC'

they arc officeho lders are made.
l'hf' mf'i:ISUrr also prohibits the
award of an unbid contract to a
bu siness or indiv idual who contributed a tot al of $1.0CXJ eluting the

previous two yrars.
Also established arc "whl stlcb·
lowrr" prolecttons fo r public em·
players who report wron gdoin g to
super.•isors. law enforc&lt;"mrnt offic
ers. prosecutors or I he news media.
un less an employee knowlingly or
r ec kl ess!~·
passc•s un fal se
informa l ion.

The bill also strengthens the
authot1ty oft he Ethl cs Comm ission
andhallows it to co ndu ct hearings
on charges that candidates or
offi ceholders have converted cam ·
paign funds for personal uss. Any
commission findings would hav(' to
be prosecuted in rourt bv local

offi cials.
Most of I he crimmal pro,·isions in
the bill are first ·drgrre misdemeanors, punishable b)· up to six
months imprisonmenl and a fin e of
up to $J.!XXJ.

Racine council adopts budget
Racine Village Council has approved a permanent appropria·
lions ordinance providing for expenditures of $~.570.56 in 1986.
Allocated to the various fund s
making up the tot al are: $62.885.5.1,
general fund: Sl17.456, fire fund :
$3,!Dl state highway: $19,867.~.
street lund: $42 .771.15 . water de·
partment : $2,500. cemetery: $2,roJ.
revenue sharing, and $2.400 water
deposit.
CouncU has tabled a proposal for
establishment of a user fee policy
for the fire house anll('X although It
has been informed !hat the Head
Stan Classes which has been using
the facll tty will be leaving the annex
at the end of this month. Officials

say that ttl' loss of r"•enue will
mal&lt;e a user fee for the annex
necessary.
Council has turned down an offer
by Henry Eblin to take over the
village trash collection noting that
the village depends on revenue
from trash collcetion to hPlp fund
vil lage operations.
Mrs. Roger Spau n has been given
permission to block rlf a section of
Vine St.. on May 3 for the St. Jude
Hospital blke·a·thon and Mrs. Ivan
Powell has been appointed lo serve
on ttl' Shrine Park Board .
Councilmen Carroll Teaford and
Frank Cleland reporl that they
a!tended a regional sewer district
mectin g and have learned that an

odor problem Is corrected .
Marshal Alfred Lyons is slill on
sick leave and Deputy Ma rshal who
is working handled row· calls,
traveled 422 miles, look part in
carff'r activ iti&lt;'s in ttl:' schools,

made 10 speeding and two disor·
derly conduct arrests and collected
$615 during the month of Februa ry.
Council ha s authorized the purchase of a fir e extinguisher for the
poUC&lt;' cruiser and has authorized
minor repairs on the vchicl~. The
village ciPrk has been au thorized to
S(('Ufl\

information on thfl prices of

radar. The village currently uses
ttl' equ ipmenl of Sheriff Howard
Frank.

Officials clear up misunderstanding
A misunderstanding about the
expiration date of the county's
contract with Blue Cross of Ohio for
health coverage for county ml ·
ployee5 should be cleared up in the
near future.
E. Alan Corlewskl. representing
Blue Cross, told commissioners he
received a leller from Richard
Patrick, an Insurance consultart
recently hir&lt;&gt;d by the county, that
the contract expires this year.
However, according to Corlewski's
records. the contract Is in effect
untl11987.
Coriewski told the board he has
been sent a qut'Stionaire from
Patrick regarding Blue Cross
services tot he county. The commls·
skln told Gorlewski that Patrick has
been given complete au1hority by
them to request the information
and instructed thai Blue Cross
release the information pertaining
· to the county.
The commission and Gortewskl
discussed the Blue Cross coverage
briefly. Gorlewsld said II' would
review the county's file In detaU to
clarify· any misunderstanding regarding the expiration date rl. the
contract.
In answer to a question from
Corlewskl, tre commission said It
did not think Patrick's lnsuranre
firm of McNally-Patrick would be
ellgible If ttl' county's lnsuranre

coverage is put 1to bid .

Commissioners have recei ved
notificallon from the county health
department that they have unti l
May to bling ttl' county landfill inlo
compliance regardi ng covrr matP·
rta l and final covering and seeding
of ttl' upper pori ion of ttl' landfil l.
The landfill does not have
adequate cover malerlal for daily
usc according to ttl' notification.
The tl'alt h department wan Is cover
material to be accumulaled at til&lt;•
site for dally usc. and covering and
seeding of the upper pot1ion of the
landfill be completed by May 1.
The commission has received

notiec bum Buckf'\ " Hills·Hoc·king
Valley Rt')!ional [.J&lt;o,·l'lopmrnt Di s·
trict of a Mench !:! Fair Housing
Seminar to tr hrld 1n Mar irtta .
Accordin g tn thf' ootifirat ion. thr
se-minar v.:ill t:.· h.•nrfi cial to arra
communi! if'~ roncrrn inR block

grant funding. Thr commissk&gt;WTs
arr fonvardi n.c tiY' informati on uf
lt'x- upcoming mf('f in g to C.11 son
Cfow, tile' ('OUI) ! \ ' S fair hOu sln~

liason.
The rommt"~Jon ;_dso rrixwtf'd
thai the las! appli cant fori he count)
develojl('r' s post! ion has been intrr·
viewro . As yrt . n0 act ion ha~ lx·rn

taken on fillin g the postilion .

Glenn: NASA changes likely
WASHINGTON !UP!) - The
spaC&lt;' agency may have to make
procedural. personnel and hard·
ware changes In r('!lledying the
space shuttle program, Sen. John
Glenn said, while repeating hls
support for the space program.
"Obviously some of the procedures (the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration) used
w"'e stood on their heads," Glenn,
D.Qh!o, said Wednesday 1n refer·
ring to testimony about confllcls
whether to launch the shuttle Jan.

28.

"Proplr Wf'JT' S(l)'in g no.go and

olher people were trying to argu&lt;'
them Into" approving the launch . .
Also during a luncheon appear·
ance before Women in Government·
Relations, Glenn said theautomatie.:
spending culs mandated by the
Gramm·Rudman law could en·
danger nat ional secutity if they ·
reach the $35 billion level for the
military.
In di scussing ttl' shuttle disaster:
Glenn riled the 1\'rd for better Sl'als
rn ttl' solld·furl rockets and ·.
making sure safety Is paramounl. ·:

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�Thunday, March 6, 1986

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
ll l Court Street
Pomeroy; Ohlo
DEVOTED T O m E INTERES'IS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WING ETI
Publisher
PAT WHITE HEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor
A MEMBER of The Un!I OO Press Int.,.rnatlonal, Inla nd Da lly Press 1\ssocla·
tion and the American Nev.•spapt.'f Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tiley shou id be !f'Ss tha n :m words
lo ng . Alllettt'rs are s ubjeet to editing an d must bE&gt; signed wl lh namt", address a nd
tel ephonp number. No unsigned lf'tters will be published LE'IIeors should be In
good tastf'. addresslng Is sues. not persooa!H!es.

Civil rights advocat~
·oppose drug testing
Democrats in Congress art&gt; urging Presid&lt;&gt;nt Reagan to ii(JlOre a
proposal for drug testing of mill ions of fed&lt;&gt;ral employees and Attorney
General Edwin Meese's claim that such tests would be legaL
At a news conference Tuesday oo the President's Commission on
Organized Crime report, Meese said a proposal that all fed&lt;&gt;ral employees.
and anyone work ing for fed&lt;&gt;ral contrac tors, submit t&gt; mandatory drug
tests as a condition of employment would not violate an employee's Fourth
Amendment right against unlawful search and seizure.
"By definition. it's not an unrt&gt;asonabk&gt; seizure, because it' s 9:Jmething
the employee consents to as a condition (of employment 1." Meese said.
111e proposal, recommend&lt;&gt;d to President Reagan as a response to the
gravity of the drug problem in the United States. also urged that private
employers seriously consider drug testing.
Meese said the Cabinet wou ld be "taking a look" at the Idea for tests in
the near fu ture but that many drug test programs could oow tJI'
implemented und&lt;&gt;r existing statutes.
Rep. Pat Schroeder, D-Colo., wrote Re~an Tuesday w-giug he not adopt
any such plan. " It reflects a basic ignoran&lt;F ri government management .
civil liberties and drug testing technology."
· Rep. Mike Barnes. D·Md .. also smt a lener to the presid&lt;&gt;nt cpposlng the
proposed tests, and Rep. Steny Hoyer, D· Md .. delivered a short ~h oo
. the House floor.
Hoyer rt&gt;rnlnded his colleagues that Secretary of State Grofg{' Shultz
refused to take a polygraph exa m
" It would tJI' interesting to hear his rPsponse to the request to submit to a
ulinalysis test, .. Hoyer said. "I hope the !l't'S id~nt url;'{'s hiscomm tssion to
rescind its proposal. "

.Letter to the editor
Pleas for justice
I've recently been watching the
politicians makin g thetr great
:Strides in protecting the rights of
·single mo thers by bringing their
non-support paying fa thers tocoun .
Now what! want to know is who ~&lt;ill
protect the rights of the fat he rs who
have always obeyed tlv&gt; court order
.of support regardless of tlv&gt;ir o~&lt;11
·hardships?
ThP CUITent ca mpaign of babv
·klssing tactics ~&lt;"hi ch both State and
Federal offi cials have co nducted
has frankly left me with a weak
S1omach. In all fairness I realiu- it's
oot politically fa shionable to tJI'
.against helping dl\·orced rmt hen;
:off of both State an d FP&lt;;Ieral help
v rograms and I agree 90met ling
nad tO be do ne IO make rlln ·
supportive fathers pay. What I'm
trying to say Is thi s could have been
don&lt;&gt; fairly to all parties bu t in stead
tlv&gt; skilled surgeons of oor gowrn ment. armed v.ith tlv&gt;ir ACME
:cJpgrecs. attacked it wit hal I tt.&gt; wal
of an ax murdc~r using chalnsaws
and mPCJt cleavers.
1 ha,·c two childrm and in ttr
nearly· thr((l years since my
di\'OrCE' brC'n c urrent tn m~ · :i.!pport
while m)· ex-wife has held a Job for
onl~'

a frw m onth.ll working for

famii)' and done little to support
herself and our childrrn . To make
ffiatters worse f've paid St?\:eral
thousand dollars lc.~s l .\'Pa r an d nou:

find I'm unable to clal m tlv&gt;m as
dependents because my ex -wUe
refu ses to consrn t.
Now tell me tlv&gt; juS1lce In that.
The state also recently passed laws
stat ing that ~ a fa ther Is ten days
late In payment his wages can tJI'
garnisheed with a fee going to his
employer for doing"'·
All of this without evm nllng suit .
r m surP we all know lhP govern -

ment is just as prompt in taking
ac tions against tlv&gt;ir ownshJrtcomings. In sh:ln they are my chU drm
onlv ~&lt;· hen I am delinquent in my
support . In the years since my
dimrCP I fi nd that even wit h the
he lp of my S('('Ond wife. we stil l
have to st ruggle to make ends ml'!'t.
All of this while my ex -wUe. Hve; in
a house. bu ilt to her specifications.
an d drives a 19&amp;1 sports ca r al l
\\1th:lut benefit of a job.
I knowthereareotherfatlv&gt;rsrn t
th&lt;•re with similar problems an dt he
go\ernment has turned a deaf ear
to our pleas tlr juS1lce.
All fatlv&gt;rs shJuld join -.ith me
an d all ot her fair-minded people
and wri te their State Represmtatives and Congressmen and tell
them to get their lv&gt;ads out of their
legislative S(';l ts and pass fair and
just laws .

G&lt;&gt;ne A. Davis
Middleport . Ohio

!?.~~r. .~~ !!~~~2. ·~·

11te moon is moving toward its new phase.
The morning stars are Mars. Jupit er and Satu111.
The even ing stars are Mercury and Venus.
Those born on this date are under the sign r:l Pisces. They include Italian
painter and sculptor Michaelangelo in 1475, French dramatist Cyrano de
Bergerac In 1619. English poet Elizatll'th Barrett Browning in 1806. Union
Army G&lt;&gt;n . Philip Sheridan in 18..11. baseball Hall cl Fame pitcher Lefty
Grove in 1!01. country musicia n Bob Wills In 1900. comic ~tor Lou Ca; telio
in 19!Wl. television personality Ed McMahon In 1923 1age 63). symphJny
.conductor Sarah Ca ldwell In 1924 t~e 621. Mercury astronaut Leroy
·Gordon Cooper in 1927 Iage 591. and actor Rob Reiner in 1947 (age 39 ).
: On this date In history:
· In l&amp;li, Mexican forces captured the Alamo in San Antonio. Texas.
kllling the last ol lE7 defenders whJ had held out be hind the walls of the
fortified mission for 13 days.
In 1&amp;17, the Supreme Court hand&lt;&gt;d down its landmark rullng that Negro
slave Dred Scott could not sue for his freeoom in a federal court, even
l hough his white master had died In a "free" state.
· In 1944. during World War II, American bomtx&gt;rs flying from Britain
began the first dayt ime attacks on Berlin.
: In 1982, live Moslem fu ndamentalists were smtenced to death by an
Egyptian court for the assassination of Presld&lt;&gt;nt Anwar Sadat.
In 1984, a 8 ·52 bomher's first test of the U.S. nuclear delivery system
using Canadian airspace set off protests throughout Canada.
, A though! lor the day: Elizabeth Ba rrett Browning, in me of her poems,
wrote, "How do I .love thee? Let me count the ways ... "

"

,.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Southem- Piketon mCet in
r'

'Before we sew you up •..'

]ames ]. Kilpatrick

WASHINGTON - Over at the
Consumer Product safety OJ~
sion, It's getting hard to tell the !JlOII
guys from the tad guys. Last ~mnth
the commission's three conservative members wted tor enlarging a
questionnaire. The two Ub!&gt;rals
voted against the expansion, and
one of them, Saundra Brown
Armstrong, had something close to
a conniption lit.
The story behind this particular
brouhaha goes back about 10 years ,
to the tbne the commission created
Its National Electronic . Injury
Survelllanre System (NEISS) . The
Idea was to contract wtth hJspltals
to obtain data on injuries related to
consumer products. Given these
data. the commission then could
assign priorities to its staff. II there
were lots r1 injuries related to
power lawn mowers. OK, the
commission would consider safety
standards for power lawn ~mwers.

ment will cost only $1,500. It may
point toW.,.d a more sensible
understanding o! actual product
llabUlty.

The Idea behind NEISS was all
right, but the data were misleading.
Chairman Terrenre M. Scanlon
says fiatly that "the rumtx&gt;rs were
goofy." Suppose that a fellow
arrives at an emerg~?n cy room with
a broken arm. How did II happen?
He !ell ott a ladder. That Ls recorded
as a ladd&lt;&gt;r·related Injury. The
report goes Into a computer with
similar reports from Qi &lt;ther
rospitals. The batch of figures Is
cooked lor a while, and subsequently It Is anoounced that an
estimated lO,OOJ ladder·related accld&lt;&gt;nts occur every year.
The figure tells us &amp;Jmelhing, but
It doesn't tell much . Specifically,
says Scanlon, the data wm't tell us
whether the ladd&lt;&gt;r was at fault or
the fellow was at faul t. The guy may
have been drunk and lost his
balanre. But the figures tend to
scare the Jllbllc. and !he more the
public Is scared, the more the Jllbllc

will suwort the Consumer Product
safety Commission. Thus the rommission's prartlce has been to
make the data Jllbllc in an annual
press release.
In an eflort to clarity the goofy
ftgu res, Scanlon and two other
commissioners, Anne Graham and
Carol Dawson, voted on Feb. 6 to
add two questions 10 the llst of
questions already asked. In addition to providing data on age, sex,
nature of Injury and type o! product
Involved, emefg{'ncy room patients
would be asked: (1) Do yoo think
you were using the product the way
It was tnel!Dt to be used? and (2) Do
yoo think yoor accident happened
because the product you were using
didn't work right ?
The additional questions will tJI'
askl!d In the emergency rooms of
eight hJspltals before the patient Is
treated. Scanlon says the experi-

Reagarls Deficit ReductionPlan
~

A

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~

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A

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Commissioner Armstrong entered an emphatic dissent. She
found It ridiculous to subject Injured
!Btlents to questioning "before
medical treatment Is adrnlnls·
term." This pilot project, she said,
wlll n:&gt;t Improve the statistical
validity o! the NEISS data. It will
not puvld&lt;&gt; deftnlte evidence o!
accident causality. The majority's
decision runs coonter to the i'ecom·
mendattons of expert constiltants.
The supplemental data would lack
reltabUity .
"The study methock&gt;logy ... Is
Intrusive, Inhumane, and Irrelevant
to the treatment o! emergency
room patients. In my opinion, It Is
highly objectionable to request
Injured patients, who are awaiting
medical treatment, to take time to
!Ill oot a !orm which asks questions
which have no medical relevance
bei:lre the medical assistance
which they require Is
administered."
Tb waste public funds on such
unproductive research, she con·
clud&lt;&gt;d, Is "UIX.'OIIICionable, lrres·
ponslble and IneXcUSable." Her
three colleagues had shown "utter
disregard" for their obligation to
act responsibly. And she IIJped the
O!!loe o! Management and Budget
would veto the experlmelit because
or the rresldent's renowned opporst·
lion to bureaucratic papenmrl!.
Who's right? Commlslloners
Annstrong and Stuart Statler have
a point: It does seem ridiculous to
question an accident victim ~ore
an intern can !M!W him up.
Cllmmlsskmers Scanlon, Dawson
and Graham are right In wanting to
refine the mlsle6dlng data produced by NEISS. II the admissions
clerks aI the eight hospitals wW use
common sense In asking the two
extra questions, probably no hann
will be done. And not much I!OOd,
either.

Up in smoke___ ____ J_a_ck_A_nd_er_s_on_&amp;_J_os_ep_h_S_p_e_ar
WASHINGTON - Several Ill ·
clea r power plants In the Unite:!
States probably could not be shut
down in case r1 a bad Ore, because
their control rooms are oot ade·
quately protected, federal safety
Inspectors have reported. This
means. In effect, that a nuclear
"bomb" could go c1f In 9:Jm~ 's
back yard In case of a serious fire.
The danger ri tire at nuclear
pl ants is no Nervous NeUy's
nightmare. In 1975, a Ore at tlv&gt;
Browns Ferry nuclear power facll·
lty In Alaba ma almost caused a
melt down. And. since then. more
than 100 potentially disastrous nres
have occurred at ot her ruclear
plants.
"Many of these fires affecte:l
systems and components lmpor.
rant to safety." one Nuclear
Regulatory Commission Inspector
wrote in a report we've seen. The
"safety " he referred to was ~he
elaborate system cl prec autions
that make sure nuclear power

plants wUl not spew deadly radiation Into the atmosphere. Based on
the record of fi res "" far, the
Inspector concluded that "the
tluiJat of fire damage to systems
and components Important to
safety Is significant."
Yet the safeguards against fire
are neither uniform rllr adequate in
the nation's nuclear plants; in a
few. fire . precautions are practl·
ca lly n:&gt;n-&lt;'xistent , according to
sources at the NRC and agency
documents obtained by our associate Corky Johnson.
For exa mple, a recent, unpubllcized fire at the Dresden nuclear
plant in Illinois t:.Imed wtthlut
being detected for four hours after
toxic polyurethane loam was Ignited. Fortunately , the plant was
oot In operation at the time, but
nuclear agency 90urces said ltv&gt; fire
could have been catastrophic If the
reactors had been running.
Widespread fire safety violations
have plagued the Nuclear Regul a-

tory Commission for years. A 1984
memo from NRC reactor safety
director Richard Spessard noted at
least 738 "fire protection de!lclencles" In the prt&gt;Vious several years.
In three ri four regions ac roos the
country.
Most appalling of all the "defi·
clencles" was the failure ri several
plant ~rators to provide adequate
protection against !Ire In the control
room. Spessard's memo pointed out
that this meant "the plant could n:&gt;t
be brought to and maintained in a
safe shutdown condition."
The oversights in many cases
were taslc. "Licensees failed to
properly Install. test and maintain
lire suppression systems in accord;ln&lt;P wtth established codes." one
NRC summary stated. Several
dozen agency reports Indicated that
certain ~Xants hadn't even bothered
to coordinate with local fire
departments.
In Michigan, federal Inspectors
found so many fire safety violations

By SCO'IT WOLFE
RACINE - Altoough touma·ment gflll'\es always provide much
excitement. this Saturday's Class
"A" District Tournament Championship game at Chillicothe High
School between the local Southern
Tornadoes and Pike ton Red
Streaks could be the ultimate high
school basketball thriller.
With these two high caliber teams
battling it out, a state tournament
preview could result at the district
.leveLThe only setback to the 'state'
p~iew, however, is that only the
!Jest team wUI win.
Both clubs have already battled
_footh-and-naii throughout the year
In the state ranklngs' battle.
Piketon and Southern were sixth
and seventh respectively much of
the season. bul the Pike Coontians
oow maintain sixth. while SHS ha s
dropped to lOth.
These two state front-runners
share the same style of "run-andgun" offense and pressure defensive games. Hav ing been cast from
the same mold, both squads have
enjoyed successtull986 campaigns .
-Southern
and Piketon 21-2.
. The 1!115-86 season was a ·record
breaking year for the Piketon High
Red Streaks as they won their first
eyer Scioto Valley Conference
Championsh lp and their first ever
Sectional Tournament Champio n·
ship. Their 21 victories set lhe all
tlme Pikl'ton record for victories In
a .slngle season.
·
Un!amillar position
. The district Is unfamiliar for
Piketon, the new kid on the block.
however. the tournament trail is a
familiar route for the wellestablished Tornadoes. Having

m

lion is relatively high these days, but MAD. And while business audiences
the old spirit of embattled yet optimis· !IllY agree with WI on both issues, they
tic camaraderie is missing. Much has would much ralber listen to some er·
gone well, but not everything. We dis· pert tell them how lo make still more
agree among ourselves over the ques· money.
lion of Reacan's successor. We are. in
a real sense. the victims of our own
McGovern shouldn't try to take too
success.
Certain conservative organizations
- notably those heavily dependent on
fund·raislng by direct·mail solicita·
tion
- arethe
in much
basically
same deeper
reason.trouble
and itfor
'Is ~~~~~~~~~~
these that McGovern was chortling
over. Direct-mail wizards like Rich- t-- - - - ---:
ard Vi.uerie devoted the 1970s to
building huge mailing lists of conser· 1-- - - - ---'
vatives by concentrating on special· 1-- - - - - ized causes (anti-abortion. anti·gun
control, etc.) and transient issues (e.g. 1-to"T."'I
the Panama Canal treaties). They lben
used these lists to zero In on the Sen·
ate's noisiest li ~als, and quite a few
of them , includihg McGovern. were
carried, feet first , out of the chamber
tor good in 1980.

Any Eas tern High School Alum itUs interes ted in participa ting in an
alumni basketball game should
contract Eastern High School at
!115-3329 or contact EHS Athletic
Director Dennis Eichinger as soon
as possible. If int erest is adequa te

I

Pta.
.. .... .35

Phf'lps, 51R: Pat Carson. 513; High Ganw C'harli(' VanM r trr. :.!19: Ru ss Carsm. 216: ~d

...... 3:.!

High Gam('- Carolyn Bacbner, 192; Helen

......l)

Phl&gt;lps. 189
Tram Sn-ifs - Tony's Carry Ou1. 1943:
Tro m Came- Eagk•s O ub. 734.

.. :»!

..~

at the D.C. Cook nuclear plant that
they found it pointless to proceed. A
grand jury Is Investigating the
matter.
In Massachusetts, Robert Fergu·
son, atormer !Ire protection section
chle! for the NRC, !lied an objection
to the granting of an exemption to
the Haddam Neck nuclear plant,
which wanted to be excused from
tn~talllng a separate control !aclllty
in case the main control room was
crippled.
Despite the safety expert's ob)ec·
lion, the exemption request was
granted by the NRC. Haddam Neck
has the dubious distinction rJ being
the mly nuclear plant In the oountry
without a backu~ control room to
shut down the reactors In case of
emergency.
Footnote: Richard Volmer, the
NRC's d&lt;&gt;puty director o! inspection
and (\'lforcement, insists the na·
lion's ooclear power plants are
sate. He said he has found the
plants' fire protection "far above"
that of OCher lndustrles.

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High St'ril's - Russ Carsttl. ~: Char Ut'
VanMet&lt;'f. 542; 2nd High Seri&lt;'s - Holen

EARL\' " 'EDNESDA\' MIXED
Felnlary 1!1. H1t111

shed some light on the SHS offense
sho wing great driving ability and
oots ide rangP.
Every SHS player ls incorporated
in Soutthern' s intnese game plan
and pressure defense.including
Matt Harris and Scoll Wickline who
came through with good stints In
Satu rday's semi-final
Eric Milliron. Pete Roush ..Jamie
Hensler, and To&lt;kl Kimes give
added stren gth to the SHS line-up.
Coach Caldwell speaks highly of his
fine bench.
Rich Gil bride. a fi.l senior, has
not se&lt;&gt;n tournament action, but has
been missed in the SHS box score.
Tickets are still on sale at
Southern High School for Saturday's Championship ga me which
begins at 7 p.m.

both a men's and women's game
will be played with odd graduation
years playing the even years.Plans
for the proposed game art&gt; being
made at this time with proceeds
going to the EHS Athletic Depart· r;:=====~;;;...---.,-1
ment. Alumni support of the game
is encouraged.

Local bowling

Now, In Ronald Reagan's second
term, not even Viguerie's loud and
persistent criticisms of Reagan,
George Bush and many upects of
their adrnlnlltration can flog the old
lilts into the lllilal prodigies of money.
raisinc. Viperle bas put bla hea.dquar- 1-- --1
ten office balldina up for sale, sold btl
mapzlne, The Conservallve Digest,
and c:ut I» staff from 200 to 70. In act.
dition, be is being sued lor several mil·
Uoa dollan by various auppllen and ,
diuallsfled clients. Nor is be alone in 1-- -'
btl problems.

Conlervatlves out on the speaking
circuit, too, report that the old water
bolel are drying up. CoUese audiences
would do anytbln1 to avoid hea.rtnc a
talk 01\ lbe succmes of Reaganomics
or.the manifest auperloriiy of SDI to

Undoubtedly. Southern's defense
will be fully serviced and "tuned·
up" for a torrid battle on both ends
of the court .
Legg, also an excellent a foul
shooter ,has good driving ability and
great outside range.
Legg is ftankf&gt;d al the other guard
by 5-11 junior Rod Nichols, the ligh
[Xlint man in the Sectional championship game with Portsmouth
East. Nichols dumped In 21 points
including 11 of 12 from the tine.
Overall , Piketon is a 71 per&lt;Pnt free
throw shooting team .
Nichols , who lavers his right
hand as a tallhandler, is the team's
best defensive player.
Trace Davis, a scrappy 6-0 junior
forward , is a good set shooter from
the wing. Defensive pressure tends
to take away Davis ' outsid&lt;&gt; inten sity and bed does not Uke to put the
ball on the Door .
At the post are muscular pivot
men Tim HUI and Doug Smith,_two

Eastern plans alumni game

Dog days for consenratives __w_iu_wm_A_. _RU$___he_r
A Maryland reader bas sent along a
column by George McGovern In wbich
lbe former senator DOtes that various
conservative organizations have !alien upon evil times, financially speak·
lng, and rejoices at the thought that his
own 1980 defeat may have deprived
his tormentors of a profitable target.
My correspondent urges me to "set lbe
record straight" by providing "a lac·
tual report."
Alas, dear reader, it is all too true.
McGovern has, for onee, stumbled into
accuracy - much as a drunken driver
will, from time to time, weave into lbe
lane he is suppoled to drive in.
"War," Randolph Bourne argued,
" is lbe heallb ollbe state." However
true that may be, the corollary is eer·
tainiy true lbal conflict is lbe mother's
milk of political activism. As publish·
er of National Review for the past 28
years, I have seen its cireulallon rise
and fall in direct relation to the mood
of the conservative movement that
provides most of its readerahip. It rose
1 steadily in the late, U50s and early
'80s as conservatives ~arne aware
of each olber and developed lbeir issues and spokesmen. II peaked with
Barry Goldwater'a nomination lor
president ih 1864, Ulen stumped as the
Nlson administration came alOI\8 and
knocked lbe wind out of lbe move.
ment. Conservatives - can you blame
them? - jWII didn't want to read
about Spiro Agnew's troubles and tbe
Watergate mess.
The 1980s have, of coune, revived
conservative spirits enorm0111ly, but
now there is a oew problem: With a
conservative prsldeftt In the Wblte
House and the Uberala In dllorderly
retrea~ the conservative tendeney II
to brood &amp;loomUy over~ problema
(and there are always pleaty of tbem)
that nmaln UlliOived, or even 'Uoad·
drftled. National Review'• clrc:u!a·

strong Inside power players.
HUJ , a &amp;4 fol'l/ard is the tallest
man on the tl'am . while Smith a
smior at 6- 3 is next in line. Both are
aggressive on the boards, bul are
rnt relied upon for much &lt;ifensive
rntput.
Sets quick tempo
Like Sou tlv&gt;m Piketon lA' shes the
ball up the floor qu ickly in a
lempo-settlng pace, utilizing a
fast-breaking attack to its advantage. When It sets up offensively it
runs a rmtion offense against a
man-to-man and a 'High-Low'
combination agalnst a zone. Both
offenses revolve around Legg.
Piketon 's defense ts mostly a
S1icky _man-to-man , alth:lugh they
have shJwn a 2-3 zone on occasion.
Piketon presses oflen. s pec ia lizing
in a half.court trap .
Bub Bra b90n a six-footer is the
sixth man . In its last several outings
Piketon has not gone beyond
Brabson's tll'nch play, giving SHS
an important advantage with its
strong bench.
ll\e ha rd-charging Tornadoes
say s Coach Howie Ca ldwell are
"ready to bust bose." The first year
varsity ment or said that his club
has mly played to potential in about
lour games this SE'ason, an d with a
hard week of prepara tion and
district championship to motivate
them This could be tlw Wf'Ck.
Besides a well -round&lt;&gt;d. balanced
attack tha i goes 12 players deep.
SHS offers a duel scoring threat
from six-foot sen iors Jay Bostick
and lbdd Adams.Both have been
among the area's leading scorers
throughout the season.
Caldwell ls happy to havE' Kelly
and Sean Grueser wearing Purpleand-gold as the two have sta mped a
lasting trademark as defensive
standou ts.
Bostick's top-rebounding effort s
art&gt; oomplemented by 6-3 sopho·
more Kenny Turley. who is also a
potent sroring threa t
Sophomore David Amt:.lrgl"y has

been there before is a distinct plus
for the Whirlwinds.
Coach Joe B. Stewart's club Is led
by 6-2 senior guard Scott Legg, whJ
is a strong candidate lor District
'Player ri the year' with his 22point
scoring average. Legg is scouted as
an excellent shooter with good
jumping ability, a trait that allows
him to leap above his opposition to
get olf a soot.
Southern mentor Howie Caldwell
stated, "We expect the ball to be In
Legg' s hands 75 percent ri the time.
Whenever there's a close game
situation there's no doubt whJ wlll
have the ball. We know this and
must be able to get a hand in his
face consistently."

'A' district finals

All Electric
Heaters

ooo

�Thursday, March 6, 1986

Ohio

Soto·prepares for opener; ~ets lose Wilson

Valley View eliminates Marauderettes, 55-49
By KEml WISECUP
Valley View made eight of its'
Sentinel stall writer
final nine free throws to cap off a
XENIA - Germantown Valley grea t tree throw shooting night for
View (22·2) advanced to the class both teams. Valley View connected
AA regional finals as the Lady
oo 19 of 25 (76 per cent ) after
Spartans ended the tournament missing their first three while
trail lor Meigs (19-51 wit h a 5.';.49 Meigs san k 17 of 23 for 74 per cent.
win over the Marauderettes here
Jenny Miller led the MarauWednesday. ,,.
derettes with 16 rotnts and 14
Valley View will play Cincinnati rebounds, 15 of her points coming in
Flnneytown (22-3) at! p.m. Satur- the first hall. Jennl Couch added 12
day with the winner advancing to m ints, including six in the fin al two
the 11th Annual Girls' State Tourna- minutes in leading til&gt; unsuccessflll
ment in Akron next week . Finney - Meigs comeback. Julle Miller
town earned the finals with a 5.'&gt;43 added 10 rebounds and six points
win over Piketon preceding thr wtule Tammy Wr ight had seven
Meigs-Valley View game.
p:Jints an d Jennl Swartz six .
Valley View sta rted slowlv .
Valley View's all-district Marla
making only two of its rirst 17 shoi s Pasquel was held to ooly eight
l'rom th~ field, and t railed 1he p:Jinls, .but ll&gt;r twin-sister Teresa
Marauderettes 134 alter one period made up for it with 18 points, the
and 24·18 at the half. Meigs which amount her sister had ll&gt;en averag·
had a 15-6 lead early in the S{Q)nd ing. Tracey Riley added 17 fo r the
period, saw tha t melt to 15-14 after w mners.
~ight straight Lady Spartan p:Jints,
Valley Viewwarmed up consider·
beforr builting it back to six by ably after their chilly sta rt, making
inlerm ission.
18 of 58 i31 per e&lt;&gt;nll . The pat ient
The third period was a different Marauderettes drilled four of their
story. however, as Valley View first six sm ts and woo nd up
went 011 a 17~ spu rt to lead 35-30 and shooting 39 ~r cent, making 16 of
werr never headed again. Trailing 41.
M&gt;-34. Meigs made a last-ditch
Meigs dominated the boards.
comeback effort to come wit hin 38-28. but !~II victim of 28 costly
four, 51-li. with a minute to go.

SHOTR&amp;JECI'ED - Un~ersity of Tulsa's Dav id Mos.- .ejfCtsasmt
by J erry Thomas of Bradley University In the 11rst haH of Wednrsdas's
action In the Missouri Valley Tournammt. Tulsa upset ninth ranked
Bradley to win the conferenet• tkle, 7f.58. UPJ.

·I

Tulsa upsets Bradley
By MIKE WElL
UPJ Sports Wrker
Ninth-ranked Brad t(')· was ~x ·
peeled to dominatE• the Missoun
Valley Confrrrnr e toumament, Lht'

way it ruled l h~ regu lar season.
Brad ley had a supris ingly tough
time in th•· quarterfi nals against
West T&lt;&gt;xas Stair and the semifi ·
nals against Indiana Stat&lt;'. using

Jafu SUI"'g('S [0 f'SC HPf' Wit h \'iCtorir s
bo1h times. In WC'dncsday night's
tit!(&gt; ma tch against Tulsa. t.h{'
Braves wrre una blf' to st a ~· cloS£'

rnough to m a k~ a pa tented second·
hall charge.
David Moss and Br ian Ra hillv
srorPd 22 points each to end ttW
Brilves· 22-ga m~ wmning stf('ak
wilh a i+58 triumph. With the MVC
championship. 1he Goldrn Hurrtra nf' ('arnrd a n a utoma tic bid tot he
NCAA Toumam£'n!.
Bradt~)· r an ~x~ r l
a t · lar~ berth to b&lt;&gt;

an ' WAA
t rn ~rl'd .

Howe\-er, the Br;l\·rs will n('('(] to
restore the confi denc.. they built in
becoming only I he second team rn
history to go und d~a tect 1Hi-Or rn
the MVC regu~lr srason. Thr firS!
was Larry Bi nf s Indiana Statr•

T he Dail v Sc&gt; ntin el
~ l'SPS

H S.960 1

.-\ ()!vis ion of !\-1u lllnul(il a , l nt·.
Publis hf'd

t' \ t~r ~

.tfl f'rn ,lf1n

MPnrl.t l

Frid el\ , Ill 1'\tUrt St . p ,1
mPr O\ . Cl h\ 0. ll\ t h£' Ohio \ ' ,l il t&gt;\ !'ut1
tls ht n r;: C1 m1p .tn 1. \ l ul !tnwdt.t
l n1'
t hrou ~ h

Pomt•r• t:- OhiC• ~ ·~~ti9 . P h ~ 1'1 :2 21~ Sf'
cnnd rl.t ~ ~ pn.., l.t i!f' p,t ld .t! Pomnm
Oht0
Mf'm bt•r l'ntk(\ f' t•'" l nlt&gt;rn t~l h • n. t l
Jn l.ind D.tl l\ P r t '" ~ ,\~ St ll ' t ,l! r o n .mel l ht•
Oh iO ~pw s p ,t pN .l. ssoc l.tlion '\ .tfi cm.tl
Ad ~· t'l'tbing Rf'p rt ·~ f' nl J · In· . At ..tn h.1m
~· f'w s p .t p• • r S .tl r~ . i n Third ,\ ,· t•nu t•.
~f'Vo'

\' or k \ cw \' n rk 101117

POST M ASlTH.
D11 t l~

to TlH•

Pom:' rov . Ohru

S..•nd .tddn..., , dlJil W"
St"'n t inf'l. Il l t'ttUr1 St .
l ~i69

Sl 10
$.!..:()
$ ~~ ~ _'0
~ l "fii.E

( OP\'

PK ICt;
Da ti~

Subs r r lbt •r" no r dt'' l l·rn).( Itt )Jd\ I h t •t .11
r il'r m.n rf'mt! tn .1 ci \ .1nn ' d trt'l: r to

111P u .n l• Sr ntmt'J nn ,,
bas b r ·n'(l i!
m onth

1.1

~ ~ nr l ~

mnnth

·II !'lf' Cl\ ,...n t', l r r!t•r I'd ch

No sub ~ tr l p t u m ~ h\ m e~ II j)f'rm n rt 'd rn

town s w ht•rt• hom•· c,trrwr
av, tl l.tblf'
.\ l all

~ n · rn · 1~

~ u hloa l p ll on "i

lns id f' Uhl u
$ 1! ·,,,

13 W!'Pk'
26 Wr • Pk ~
~2

Wrf'k'

13

W t' f' k ~

t "r
O u t ~t d t•

Ohln

ad\'antag£' wi th r ight m inutf'S to

pia)' Bradle)· newr got closer th an
H.

ELo;ewher&lt;'. ~o . H Indi ana rou ted
\ o. 18 Michigan S t at ~ 97-19 and l"o.
20 f'l&gt;p~di ne df&gt; !~a l!'d Lovola·
Mar,·mounl 8'i· 82.
·
A t East La nsing. Mi ch . Steve
Alford srored :11 point s an d ft"i'S h·
man Rick Ca Uowa\· addf&gt;d 18 to lmd
IndJan a to a Big Ten 'ir tory . Scott

SkUrs srorro .t 1point s to become
Michigan Sta te's all · tlm~ leading
scorer. Hr h;.rd 12 in the sc.:ond half
aflrr su ff~ri ng what could be a torn
mu scle in his left tib cage near the
end of thr fi rst half.
lndi,rna's nctory S~l up a Sa tu r·
dac· smwdown for th&lt;' Big T~n lit lc
with df&gt;!rnd ing champion Michi ·
gan. Th&lt;· Hoosrers. 2J.6 0\Ua ll and
13-J in thr co nfrr~nc~ . have a
ha lf -game lead O\W thr \\"o lv~­
rinrs. who play Ohio Stale Thurs ·
dav night
At Mali bu. C"al tf .. S&lt;&gt;nior gua rd
Du·&lt;t,· n ~ Po l~ &gt;ron'(! 24 points and
(;rant ( ;ondrf'lirk contribu!rd 21 in
~ min utes to lift r-:o.1J P~p~rdi ne .
The 1\"a\"f" . 25·4 0\·erall a nd
ronferen rr ch amps at JJ.J. rer Pin'-i an &lt;-l ur om at ic NCAA Toum am~n l b&lt;&gt;t1 h. l.m ola Ma n •mount
18-10 and 10·4." wi ll likely ~
b)-passed b)" thr \ CAA. bui is a
strung

r hoicr

ror a Na tiona l

in\·itationa l Tourn&lt;t mrnt bid .
In other games. Mississippi

Sli8SCRIPTION RATF,...,
8 1· fa r rlr r or :\1otor Ruu tf'
Onf' Wt•£'k
Onf' Month
OnP Yt·a r

Final Four tea m of 1979.
In its r·~~vo ,·ictories m·prTu L~a 1his
smson. Bradle:-• outrrbounded Ill&lt;&gt;
Hurricane 70-l i . Wrdrrsday, Tu lsa
b&lt;&gt;al lhr Braves on the boa rds Jt.:l-J.
Bradk&gt;y , 31·2. has won 14 games
by 4 mints or less. inc lud ing a ti.'). &amp;J
triumph in the semifin als l'ursda\·
m-er Illinois Stale.
·
"I'ulsa led .'!5·29 at halfl im&lt;' and
pushl'd thr ad,·an tage to 42· 31ea rly
in the SC&lt;'ond half. Moss hit 3 fi·~
throws to boos t Tulsa to a !i!H\

:~

dr ff'a trd TPnnessff 7.~ - 56 and Mis -

SISSippi State upset \ "andrrbill lll-54
to ad,·an('(l in thr SouthPa.&lt;;tprn
t"onf~r~er tournamen t; Seton Hall
defeated Connecticut 76-66 in the
prrltmina" · round of thr Big East

turnovers compared to t ll&gt; Spar·
tans ' 16.
The loss ended Coac h Ron
Logan's Marauderettes season , on&lt;'
in which the Meigs gals can hold
tll&gt;ir heads hig h. Meigs won
sectional and district champion·
ships along the toumey·s trail
which included a 74-69over lime win
over New Lex ington, the defending
class AA state runner-up. Meigs
also defeated Sheridan 44-30 for thr

SK\l.Jr-'F.RS LEAGl IF.
Slandl n«s for f t'truiU'l· :41, 19/ti

Te-wn
Minks Auto....
S n ~qtp n Ins. .......
Bob F:1·an " F'am1
\ t!'C' Ie&lt; Ca llf'rin ).! .
Rro Mini Man
\'t lla~ · · ln.s
t ;tno's..
Odd B.tll s .

.~ 5

" ' I.
).I
tf!
.. 50 22
. +t :!l
.U lJ

·

.. ~~ ll

Fo:x\land

... 36 36

. ...

~2

~

. ... l l ~ 2
{;mit-s OruR
... :II 42
( ·&lt;'ntra l Su pplv
.. zq 44
.tr ffrn E'(t' .. ·
. 26 46
I 'aul Davi('S..
.. .. 25 ~ i
.\liehai'l 8.: Fr wn(k
.
... .. 2-1 .m
. Mink!. Au to " ·on f' t.'! hl 1)')1111" fr om P;tsqu;tlf'
~ . If(- llr.ch bowh for Mink.o; uo ; 1.~ .1 . F"inlll'' '
1\ llh .'H3. Hili! h 00\l"lf'l· tn r P.:lSQUilh' El('('. w.i~
T \' augh v:ith 4~ 1
Foo:l ldnd won •·ight potn l.~ from Sn!J\n:lf' n
I n.~ li ~Rh bou'lfl' for Foodl,md wus BtlllhtiJ£'\
'' tt h ~192 H ~ h b.M' I"r for Sn(M·drn I ns. was j
\' ,trrrn v.ith ~J.
Pau l 1\:n 'iC'S won -. i."&lt; PJ ITl tS fr om Mi&lt;'hai'l &amp;
rr im cb H ~ h OOw ln for Paul Da \' IPS was G
Fl'ih('f with ~H . ~lig h howl('!' for Mirh;tf'l &amp;
Frirnds W&lt;L'&gt; R. Car rw.-s With 51R
\'il lagf' Ins won SIX !X)mt s fr um Rob E \·ans
l lt~h OOwlt'l' to1 \ '1 llagr Ins . WitS1. . Crum wit h
!"li~l Hi~ h bol-l 'lt•r fo r Hob £ \ · an ~ l.l'&lt;t'&gt; R. ~ pcnC'r
Wllh \l l
H1o Mmr Ma r l wm sb: pcnnt s from Odrl
BaiL" . IIJJ;:tl t.J.,,,It,- lor H io M mi M an Wit" P .
\\ t't hrr Wtth :-.~ HiRh tnwlfT for Od d Ba lls
u. t~ H RUSSl" l l \11th :"1'\.
Ctrelf'S Cal " '00 six pomrs from .J0ff rn
h ;c High OOw \rr b r Cirrlf'S C it " . t~ T 1.
.lont'!' \.l'tlh ~n.l llich bJwlf'r for .l rfhn E."&lt;c
Yo . t~ A D&lt;n·L
., WJ!h ~, r t·TH ral Suppl,\ won Sl:\ poin ls fru m llw
F . lk ~ Hi¢1 tm ·lf'r for ff'ntral Su w l~ was H.
.IMksoo with ~~\ . l·til" h b.Jvolrr for ThP E: lks
~.~· as D. Kr l\0\• with fiH.
Ginu·_.. wOO si ."&lt; p Oinrs rrom Ctl llf'S DrtJR.
Urgh bow ll'f lor t.ino ·.., ~~o·a." C. . Pmwr \11Th .17fi.
I U ~ h OOw!Cf lor LJIIJrs Uru~;: was T . Elllotr
\.11111 :111
l'asqu.ll&lt;' E lfX' .

~- I G Hr M~ ·~

HAN DICAP ~Gl'E
Slart dl ~ lor 1-"f'tni!U')' zt . 19!11

Tram
lhCounty

S po r1~

Proplr's Bitn k

\\' l
. ~.1 2i
. -IH .1'1
... ~ ;l,.j

Stlup
.

.H•nkms Conrrr Tf'
Tolrr &amp; Tn ~r lnsurilnn ·
C trmll r--. orno;; Dod~ t · ..
IPrichu In n

4h 34
.tli
. -H

.1-l
,16
3ti

rtrf'Srorw .

u

MrGUlTf'S . . . . .
(; &amp; J Aulu P a rt s

-40 4(1
Ill -l(l

illnsm furml u!l'
Sparklr Supph

'17 ·t1
J4 41i

M!)lSi' Lr~ t · u'i.'l!

:\ .i pf:('r T r lJ(ktn ~

Ci'nTr:rl Trusr Bank ...

.12 .J X
~ ·1 .JS
. ....... IX £2

1'r!.( "ounT\ S J) trT.., ShtV 1h i w11h M rt;u~
'&gt;'11h lou r J):&gt;lnt~ dPIN't' f.: l'rldt&gt;mo rc with 59';

~ h.•d&lt;&gt; :1·17, M&lt;frla Aa11 on 2fi...l, J t•nnlft'r Ht:Mard

n I 1 TOTAL.."! IS. li-N.

:m:JGS 1•1

- Jm ny Mil~·r .1·10.16. Julif' Mltk&gt;r

HU~ .J Ninl C001·h 6-0.12. .li'nrtJ Swot rU: l"'i ·fi. Tltlllmy

\\ r~t hr :Ln Mitrl a Muw r 11).2, Jodi Harrlson i).O.C.
1\ h !o..~r".W OOOS 0~1. I .LS&lt;I Putl ns [W.(I, Tf'!'PU Johnson
o. r ~ n. ~ly

lh

SJobit rt

1).(}.(). TOTALS

li- 17-tll.

Quartf'l' s:

\ ' aI ~ Vt~ ~

14 ! l

Jj

-...'i."'
1.1 11 R 17-e

Mt'l.p

Pharmacists Who

care About You

VILLAGE
PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

b\' D. !innf't' was

high for Sparklr .
(~

&amp; J Au to

P&lt;:~rt!l

wo n six points from

1\awr Truck ing. M . ~·C'r guson 's Qr.l w as hil'!:h
s.t'fk&gt;!: fo r e &amp; .l ..571 by C. NapPfr w.u; rhr hiJ!:h
total for th(' :'1/;tppr·rs .

-10 32
. J 7 .' r1
.. .... 36 36

T~ E I~ .. . ..

l\-ION0.\1'

was hi).! h lor CN D. .

Ma rla rllsqUf'l 2-f.fl.

Tt•r&lt;'S.I Pu:.Q I.I.'I -1- lll-l!l. Tr.l ~' R lk&gt;y 7.J.I7, Terr.·

• Prescriptions filled
• Over-the-counter drugs
• Health and beauty aids
• Cosmetics and perfumes
• Sickroom; surgical needs
• VItaminS and diet aids.

Local bowling
~IONDAY

NrrE OWI.' i
Skylihl' Lan6i

Frtnwry ~ . l9lli
T1•wn

Pts.

Ph i ~m"c; ~ m1h

t 36
. l:!li
. 119
111

... .
'""''"'"' ..... .. ....... ... .. . ···· ····· ·
W ha l~

's l'!'i'tl Can &amp; Pm1s..
Po.,.,'C'Il' s Su~r Valu
Hollbins &amp; Mw rs .
110
.I oil.· T Supplim;,
89
Ga il£D' Hmr Art s .. ....
A6
.lf'ff('f'S Tr ocklng &amp; Exc .. .. ..... ......... .. .. RJ
Hf"dman Inn .
.. ... .... ..... .... 74
Ind. Gamr - Laurir (3(-t z i n ~ . 104: P£1('
l lo ud cL~ hf' ll . 19i, Bc&gt;\'f'rl\' Housh, IRJ; Ind.
Sf"or ~ - P1&gt;g Houda\hC'1 1. .fSb; Laurip
Bct7j ng, Mi~: S.rnctv Fo lm f'r. ~43 : T('am C am r
-Pharmacy N01ih ti22; Pow('ll's SuiX'f Valu .
hiS: .I &amp; T Su ~ll cn . 61ti; TC'am Srrif'S Pharma{!· N011h . 17 ~ ; Casco.·s. 1742: Y.'ha·
ll'y \ USPd C':trs &amp; Au to· Parts, li~ .

Sensational
fashion
You'll get great tooks from pleated.
taperea pants ard stnpe d po les.
both 1n eos'('Cart: labncs I! makes I
good SE"nst
Pt~ n l~

LEGAL NOTICE

/

/~~
1.!/ "'-&gt;J""

.

·'

'

t6135 KOdcl polyt~lt!I ICO!: ton

W hit( Mld Olt!lt V O !I&lt;J f'l ~

s•lt::&gt; 1-1~ Mrsses 8-18

The Public Uti lities Com mi ssion ot Oh to has set
lor public hea ring Case
No. 85-01-EL-EFC Subtile
A, to review the luel procurement practices and
policies of Ohio Power
Company , the opera tion
ol its Electric Fuel Component and related matters . This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
1:30 p.m on Monday .
Marc h 10 . 1966, at City
Council Chambers. 218
Cleveland Avenue . S W. .
Ca nton. Ohio 44702.
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
to lle heard. Further information may be obtained
by contacting the Commission .
THE PUBLI C UTI LITIES
CO MMISSIO N OF OH IO
BY Mary Ann Orlin ski,
Secrelary

"'))'i'ir150! 50 cO! ton / po!'ff Sit:r Whi le

wtlh t"""'l'ldtr, lognt btU£, 119m po nk
01 m•nt ~t rlfl" ~ Stlts S. M. l. XL

.'

i -·

\

-!-- --r
I - -I

\ _j,~·

l

) j

,_

NEW HOURS 9:30-5 :00 MON .- SAT.

Chancey, Drummer,
Wise, Bostick, Miller
get all district honors

StroND TFAM

-

lh f'

MOOS('

.lpnk.JrL"i Conn ·f'TP won rrf,: hl poi n!s rrcm
Prop\(''s Bi.mk ~ h\ H. ~au r.l ('rs ~~o·;t,. rht•
hrJ,! h Sf1' K'S tot .lf•nkirls . C'. Wi lhums with ~
uo , ~ h t~ h l:.o-.4·1t, . lor Proplni .
.. Flrf&gt;&lt;;Tonr won r r,g ht points lrom Cl'nt ral
I rus t Ba nk H l 'laTwort hv ~U{'('I t 'Cl out " Bi,g
I r.u ' · ~ irh J:Jl fur Ftn&gt;ston£'. C. I . on~ · s :iii was
hiS!'h Ictal for Ct·ntr .tl Trust
Tolrr &amp; Tolt•r lnsurancr wons l"&lt; p:t inl s from
~ a..'lm F'':JtTurun •. 0 . :"\Nsoo 's ~ 2 was high for
l olr rs. D. So.i \Tr' s 5R.1 was htgh toral for

Masoo
C uToll f\orTL'I D:xtw · spli t wiT h Spru·kJr

PartsPh,IS
Cl\ltostor&lt;'

The ac cident left a 2\l·inch
lacera tron above Wilson's right eye.
tha t look 17 slilches to close, a small
cu t on the side of the nose that
requirl'll lour st itches and hyphema
- blood in the anterior cham ber of
thr f')"e.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iil
Whdl Good Is A Doctor If You
Cm't Afford His Services?
At the Waugh Chiropractic CJ'r,ic
f'\!'tUHll' ldn

dfford treatm!'nt 1
Danger Signals of
Pinched Nerves:
I. Headaches, Dizziness.

Blurred Vision
2. Neck Pain, Tight Muscles,
Spasms
3. Shoulder Pain, Pam Down
Dtfficult Brea thmg.
Abdom1na! Parns

5. Lower Bac k Pai n. Hrp Pam .

Pam Down Legs

OUR NEW OmCE POUCY:

2. 11yoo OOn't rta ve Qualifying Hea"h Insu rance an d rt you are accepted as a pattent. rest assured

ttwlt we m1ke our ~rviCes affordlltJie to everyl)'le wOO needs the care w~ h He).rtje LYld ~~

Eastern. 6-0. Sr .. Lq,:;; MarkK.rerrun.Peebles.
6-0, J r ., 27.5; Tom Rinehart, FairOl'ld. &amp;4 ,Sr.,
18.3; Mike Wil liams. Crooksville . &amp;2 . Sr., 21 .5.

pay""'' arrangem1&lt;1t.

Mark Goodman.

SD:OND TEAM -

Manchester , S-4 , Jr .. 15.4; Craig GU!il and,

l.urasvillf' Valley, 6-5. J r .. 14.6; Bobby
Lindamood, Por tsrn:Julh East. 6-0. Jr .• 18.3;

WHY ARE WE DOING TillS?
At

the Waugh Chlropractll' Office we are dedicated to the deliv ery of
chiropractic care to everyone who needs it 1n our ro mmunlty. After all ,
what good ls a doctor ~ yoo can't afford his serv lti'S?

Pa t Holm &gt;s, Iront on St. Joseph, 64, ~h . ,
19.0: Keit h Pollock . Unloto, ~3. Sr.. JU ; MikP
Krmprr, Nor t h C allta, 6- 2. Jr ., 18.7: DekP

Barnes, Hannan Tra ce, 5-9, Sr., 15.1; Jeff
Zalenski. Por1s rrout h Notn&gt; Dame. 6-1, Sr..
18.0;
Player oil he \ 'ear: Brian Roi.ch, FnnkiUI

It 's also our way r:l lhan ldn g our communJ tv for t'l.&gt;lping us to become IhE'

fastest growing health profession In Ameri ca toda.- ·.

Fumaee Green.

Group • Auto • Health • Accident • Woti&lt;man's Comp .

C&lt;&gt;&lt;oocM&lt; ot lhe Year: o\rch Juotus,
\'aiJeoy, Joe B. Stewart, Pllleton.

U~t.:aniD e

THE

GIRL~

(L M'; i\AA
FIRST T EA M - nna JuU\erat . Mia mi

WAUGH CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC

Tra('('. 5-foot·G. Sr .. 16.1 points per g8Jll(': Amy
POI·IIhlda, Lancas tt&gt;r, 5·7, J r .. 16.0; Carla
Tisdalt&gt;, Chllliro!hf'. S.R. Sr .. U.O; Loti

w,;", \1ukin ~

II ·1/f,.nlnh le To fl,, 11o'flith, -

CALL NOW

Greeno , Miami Tra«\ 5·11. Jr . 8.6: Angle
BaxtPr . Lancas!('f', ~ 10. Sr. , 11.0; Sunshin(&gt;

(304) 675-6433

Gt&gt;rig, Athms, t\.0 . J r.. 16.1: Darcy Wilburn.
Marl(lna. !).9, Sr.. 1~ .0: Ann Brokaw,
Marietta. ~9 . Jr., U .O; Gin a 1\Jrner,
Ch \ll!rothe. S-10 , Soph .. 1.1 .9.
PIA)'t'l'
l:'ear: 11Da JuWeral, MlamJ
'l'raoe.
Coado otthe V..v: Linda Eddy, MarieUa.
U.ASSM
FIRST TEAM - Debbi e C\Jtrord. Por1s·
mou th. !HI. Jr .. 24.t Teresa Boring, Vin ton
County . 6-1, Sr .• 16.9; Susan Rotx&gt;rts, PlkPton,
&amp;0, Jr .. 17.1: llsa Mum lhan, Coal Grovl?. $-7,
Sr .. 14 .3: Rosalyn Halrstoo. Po rt s ~mutb. &amp;0.
Jr., 16.1: [)E&gt;na Austin , Wh{'(llersburg, 5-8. Sr ..
18.0: J{'nn y Mlllff . Meigs . &amp;I. Jr., 9.6: Ja mie
McGraw . Minford . 6-{), Jr.. 17.3.
SEX:OND TI:AM Andr.. Pu pero.
Plkf&gt;lon. ~. J r . , L"' .O; Ju lie Mlller, Metgs. tj..(),

- Hours 5 Days A Week By Appointment Dr. J. 0. Wauglt. Chiropractor

of,..,.

2415 Jackson Avenue. Point Pleasant
Bmg th• ad

w~ h

YIIJ to "hdale offe&lt;.

Jr .. 10.8; Rhonda Swann. Oak Hill. :&gt;- 10, Sr .•

L'l.5: &amp;&gt;tsy Woocl, Greenfield McClain , 5-10,
Sr., 11.7: Ronda Robinson, Coal GJ"'\/1?, 6-1.
Sr., 10.8; Shawna Co mpton , M&lt;'I:Rrmm
North\.vl"St , s.-8. Sr., 19.5; Amy Dix on,
N(&gt;lsooville- York. !HI. Sr .. 14.6: RenEE' Carter.
Greenfield McClain, f)-7, Jr .. 15.9.
Player ol l1lt' \ 'ear: Debbie Clltford,
Pot18moulb.
Cord• of lht Year: Paul itelk'Y, foal
Gro\lt'.

L"'LASS A
FIRST TEAM - Kl'Uy i.}(M!ll:i , Rkh rmnd
Da le Southeastern. ~. Sr., ~ .4 ; Tracy
WU IIams. Franklin Furnace Qeen , ~ 10.

Keit h Bar nhan .

Soph. . :16.2; Michelle Cioorgt!, North Ga llla,
~ . Sr., !;.0; Angtt'"Au.'&gt; tin, Peebles, 5-10, Sr ..
19.0; ~~ Beall)', BishOp f1aget , &amp;1l, Sr ..
17.8; Susa n Cooley, Oay, ~9. Sr .. 21.6;
StephaniE' Hagen. South Wf'bsler Bloom, 5-11.
Sr .. 14.6.

AUTO PARTS YOU CAN TRUST FOR
• QUALITY
• VALUE
• PERFORMANCE
SALE PRI CE S GOOD THAU l t 12186

FREE

OR

..-..,_BRAKE SHOES

S7!~,

•CHAMPION

tuck_,. in thr quartf'rfinals.

•AC

Ravmond Brown srored L1 of his
111 points in thr sceond ha lf to help
Mrssissippi Sl ate P'Wco me a JO.
p:Jinl ddicit and drfr &lt;ll \"andr rbilt.
Mississippi State. 7 21. fa c~s
'"'o nd · S«'~cl Aubu m , 19-9.

•AUTO liT E

·-.t... '

• • '
-· ! .··-

Soon, equipme nt owne rs wilt be able to take advantage
of a complete new line of Caterpillar Equipment featuring:

•
·~ -

• Unequalled parts/service availability
• Competitive prices

Parts Plus

• Attractive financing

CREEPER

$999

Big • Big

•

H's only from Walker Machinery Company! Come see us
at Expo '86 March 12-13 at the Charleston Civic Cen1er,
- and discover the deal of the century for yourself!

Big

2 pc . liYilll room suite with extra high 40

conn1e.'sgot lt.___ ___,

in. back and utra thick 8 in . cushions with
wrap-around wood on back . wings and
knuckles. 100% nylon/antron cover.

WHIN YOU PUICHASl TilE FOllOWING

'STANDARD IGNinDN' TUII - UP PARTS

REG.
1208

- THE SPAR!( PlUGS ARE ON US!-

1

t\landord lgnili011 H. l.~
Wire Itt with l year, lO,OOO
milt warranty

THE SHOES MOST LIKELY.
When 9to 5 extends to 9 again - when who!
pairs petfectly with panl1 must be just as tight
with ruffles - you need the Shoe$ most likely to
succeed. Foronvocc:oston. Atony hour Alioto
ptlce most likely to please your budget.
MIO-heelel in WHIII, PINK, IUUE
YEUOW, UlAC, IVORY

OPEN UNnL
7 P.r.'! , FRIDAY

!AYE
1401

LIV. IM. SUITE
lEG. $J lt.OO

tltondord lgnitiDII / IIuo !troak
Di1lrillutor Cap arlll Rotor

$1999 5
SAVE •120

AUO AYAilAil£ AT YOUI lOCAl
PAITICIPAliNG SUVKI
STA110NS

PILLOW

ARM
SPECIAL
1704 lanorn ho.

htritage hou$t ~ ,

S79995

•w I PC. E.l.

446· 11U

.::..-.

n

sho u l ~r rehabilit ation.

Arms, Numbness rn Hands
4. Pain Be tween Shoulders .

DRUMMER, Mel~. Rick Van Metre,
G-McOaln.
CU SS A
FIRST TEAM - Bria n Ro3{"h, Franklin
F'umaC(&gt; G l"een . !Hl. J r .. :ll.6; Jay Bostick.
Ra cine Sout ~rn. &amp;0. Sr .. 15.1; 0\rtS Clark.
Lucas\1Jie Valley, 3-6, J r., 15.8: Scott Legg,
Plk£&gt;1on, 1).2, Sr ., l'l .2; Dennls Klng, &amp;aver

Sr 18.6: DwayJI&gt;
1.'\.7: Mark

SET OF SPARK PLUGS

At U.•xington Kv.. .Joe Avers and
Curtis Ritchwuod each srored 18
poin ts to l&lt;&gt;ad Mississippi. 01~ Miss.
12 16. will mrct top-s('('(]ed Ken·

SHOE PLACE

In other camp news, pit cher
Dave Shipanoff signed his 1986
contract Wednesday, leaving only
pitchers Don Carman and Daulton
unsigned.
Meanwhile, NEW York Mets
general manager Frank Cashen
once again has proven true the
baseball axiom thai th&lt;' best trades
are sometinnes the ones never
made.
Len Dyks tra was a key figure in
numerou s off-season trade rumors .
How!'Ver , Cashen held on to his
center fi eld insurance. Wc'&lt;lnesday.
it became necessary for tum to
collect on it.
At the Mets' St. Petersbu rg. F la.,
training camp, center fielder Moo·
kie Wilson was hit above the right
eye with a thrown ball during a
run-down drill, suffering a gash
needing 21 stitches to close. The
inju ry will keep him from being
able to play until May.

Dykstra, who took o\·er in cm tcr
last year when Wilson's rotat or c uff
in jury forced him out of thr tinrup.
became the projl'Cted sta rwr.
Wilson's rehabil itation of hts
surgically repa u·oo ri ght smuldcr
was comin g along well . and he was
hoping to be ready by Open in g Da)·.
The eye injury will set back hts

~~o·as htgh bov. lf'f' for Tn .CountY . 5.1 ) bv p
L.t"i.'lf'lf'r "'·'-~ l op 00"- lu · for McCuin'S ·
,l('n r ho l nn \ \ ( tn r t ~ h t pomt s fl ·nm Moo."'&lt;'
Lo:.lgt• d731. M Cr,ur's ."8'1 11:as rtK&gt; hrgh srorr
for .Jr ncho -!.'t i l~ &lt; ) P ac k~~o· ; lShi¢"1 S&lt;.u wfar

rournamrm.

r7#e

ou ~ves_ at a disadvantage. We
aren t gomg to be fools about it."

BIRCHFIELD. Ironton. &amp;7. Sr .. 12 .0.
C....players of the Year: MIKE CHANCEY,
Mejp, Tooy J acll.ooo, Greenfteld McClain .
Co-c oa ches of the Yea r : GR EG

Mike Chancey. &amp;-5 senior from
Meigs High School, who averaged
17.7 points per outing has been
chosen as co-Class AA player of the
year in the Southeastern District by
the Associated Press. Ch ancey, son
of. Meigs head football coach a nd
Mrs. Charles Chancey, recently
s;gned a letter of intent to play
football at Ohio State Unlversitv.
Chancey shares hom rs withTony
Jackson of Gree nfield McClain .
Meigs' Greg Drummer and Gr een·
field' s Rick VanM atre, a former
Meigs Marauder, wer e named the
Class AA District Co-coaches of the
year.
Rick Wise of Meigs was na med to
the first all distr ict team along with
TVC star Tee Morris of Trimble, a
&gt;-10 sen ior; an d Gary Harrison, of
Ga Ulpolls, a &gt;-10 junior.
Narnro to the Class A boys
team was Jay Bos tic. Sou thern. a
6-0 S€11io r who averaged 15.1 p:J inls
~r ganne. Named to til&gt; second
team. Class A all dist riet wer~
North GaUia's Mike Kemper, 6-2.
junior with an 18.7 poimt average
and Deke Barnes, Hannan Trace.
5-9 S€11iorwho averaged 15.1 p:Jin ts.
Jenny Miller . &amp; I junior from
Meigs was named to the first team,
Class AA girls' basketball team.
Her sister. Julia Miller, 6-0 junior.
was named to tll&gt; second team
Class AA girls' district team.
Michele George a. North Gallla, &gt;-8
sen ior with a 25 point average was
named a member of the tlrst team
Class A gtrls' dlstlict team.

Federal Hockin~. fHl. Sr.. 15.5; SCOTI
VICKERS. Chesap€'9 kt&gt;. 6-3. Sr.. 11 .3; Otr~
Btlprt&gt;. &amp;1. Jr .• 17.0: Do vr

52 Wf' f' k'

7 P.M. FRIDAY

PlAYERS RECOGNIZED - Meigs' Mike ChiUicey, left , a &amp;5
senior, was chosen as the Chilli AA District's Q&gt;.pla.yer of the year by
the Associated Press Wednesday . .U.O cliOSEII to the lrst team was
teammate Rick Wise, while Coach Greg Drummer was named the
District's co-coach of lhe year. Jay Bostick, senior member of the
Southern Tornadoes, was nwned to the 11rs1 team all Dlsbict, Class A.

!LASS M
J1IIST TEAM - MIKE CHANCEY , Meigs
0. ~, Sr., 17.7; Tony Jackson. G('(leflfteld
McCiainG-J,Sr .. :0.9: RIO&lt; \\1SE. MeljlS. 5-9.
Sr .. 18.1; GARY HAR RISON, Ga lll pot~. ~10 .
Jr., 25.2; T('(&gt; Morrison . Trimble , ~10. Sr.,
21.0: Patrick Tubbi. Portsrmulh. 5-10. Soph..
17.3: Mark Hammond. Jackson. ~9. Sr.. 14.3:
DEAN WU.KS. Fairland. &amp;4. Sr., 1.5.3.

.' /)

2fi Wf' " k "'

OPEN UNTIL

TAMP A, Fla. (UP!) - Worltlng
without a screen to re- famillar~
himself with fielding mechanics,
Marlo Solo threw batting practice
Wednesday for the last time he!ore
he opens the exhibition season lor
the Reds Saturday.
"Very few pitchers do that, but I
do because I know I won't have a
screen out there Saturday," "said
Soto, who will oppose tlie Philadelphia Phillies at AI Lopez Field in
Tampa in Cincinnati's exhibition
opener. "I have to get used to II."
Reds General Manager Bill
Bergl'SCh Wednesday reaffirmed
his club's commitment to the
24-man roster. Recent reports from
other training sites have several rJ.
lhe Reds' National League West
Div ision rivals contemplating a
retun to the traditional 25-man
sqaud.
"Our policy still is to go with 24,
but we're going to lie watchful of
whalthe others do," Bergeschsaid .
"We'll never do
to

sec tional crown and Portsmouth,
45·33, for the district championship.
l ',\LI£'1' Ylt:.'W r» l -

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

446-4204
Doily. a.m.-7,....

Sat. I a.m.-4 p.m.

IAnDII

PT, PLIASAJn

Pu.tOY

675 -1$20

119 w. 2..r '"·
9'12-2139

SIS Miill st.

2611 la&lt;kiOfl Awo.

675 -2731
8 o.m.· l p.m.

I a.m.-! :30 p.m.

REG. 1499.95

IA$01
lt~to

33

713-l!l I

I a.m.-1:30 p.m.

$34995

NIW 2 Pc. btl~ AmtriCift
Pillow Arm li¥tn&amp; Room
Suite with m1ple Trim. Pleid
COVIJ only,

-s
RICE

SAY£ 1150

FUR NITUR E
-

H' 1l S •· COlld

G.r lltp oltS .

t l&gt; ··· t t·,,·
lit • I •
) . j [l

q •t .-:

I

,

CBI

YO UR CATERPILLAR

Carerptllar Cal and

Q3

are

Tr!ldem ;~rk s

DEALEr"!

ol Catetptlla' T•a ctot Cn

For On the Job Security!

�Thursday, Man:h 6, 1986

,,

The Daily Sentinel Page ·7

Pomeroy Middlepon. Ohio

..

Dogfight promised at this weekend's district tournament

·MASON

FURNITURE CO.
Second Street • Mason, W. Va.

SENSATIONAL STOREWIDE
SAVINCS FOR A VERY
LIMITED TIMEI,----,

IXTIA ...
THAT
INTIII
HOUSIFUL
OfFIIIINIW
FURIIITURI
CAll II YOURSI
BUY3,4,5 01
MORE ROOMS OF
FURNITURE AND
SAVE HUNDREDS
AND HUNDREDS OF
OOUARSNOWI

ASSIST YOU!

~

~.

MFRIDAY!

DOORS
OPEN:
SHOP UNTIL 10PMFRIDAYNICHTI

SLEEPER SPECIAL

I

IT ENf?S SATURDAY, MARCH 8th, NO EXTENSIONS!

STOP DREAMING!
......,,
.._ - ...,... •- ,.,.ron ••h ""'' ,_
... ,..,.. , _ _ ~ •....., , qi Oo,.blr •••

-

h .. .. . ". ~ ........... . ..... -

-

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

-· ~ 10 ..... ..... .. . , , " """' ·~ ·~ • - ......
Loon,._ ,._t- " .,,..,14 • Uh ld" ltr,... ""'~­

" '·

_.. -. ... '"'

,, _.., llio o l .. «&gt;&lt;&lt; ' "''""''-' 1 ""~ ~ .... ,., 11
_,..,.. ....,,rn, •u or 1 h~ o: 1 "'"'' " ' .. .,., , 1ft
~""

....

.,

....

..-

"""''""'

FRIDAY!

I!EVOLUTIONAI!

STORE CLOSED UNTIL 10 AM FRIDAY!
TO ALLOW SPIOAL CREWS TIME TO REDUCI PRICIS ON IVERY
I1BIIN EVER'I' DEPARTIBJT, NOT JUST BASSETT~'&gt;, EVERI~IINCI

.......

LIVING ROOMS REDUCED'

2 ~~~- Colorilll

.

Gold Antron Nylon with$
.,.. pnnt pottem. Mull

· - - ... - · .. - ·- · -

C111t1111 tf I I - - - 'IMCNA ... 1M left pIll,_,_~

.............
,._ er.t 1f1111i1 -a1

)'Ill.,."'

-·~~·-

"
1 Reg

1495..

-

. . . - . . . . ._. $869
l's Will lor

toca. r. ratwl

·

IMfdlillfllcfiOIII . . ......... 1. . . . II iDMI llfODIIII . . .
. . . . ._...,,.,...,... ..... d ... lllllb.

.,,..,.,.... _ .

WOODI

Highland County by i
A Great Country Va

4g750

'*-•ttl...._.
Qrt.liftp ~ltlt .... sohdtJ.-i. -·-~·­
. . . . . . Wy l'ltWIIIII Willi W«&lt;d . . . . . daa 11-• .,., IIWI
110011
Enllttllri-Hs fi'lmPIIdllinMin..,IIOOIIIfllb
stylil• 11. . .0 ~ . ..
r~ • ,_. willlt
CDUII'J'I' -.. qNMy m• ., ..
llld IICJW . . . . . . .
~ ~

'*--

lleulltt rol erm aurta.
Motc:Nng ..lowt.
Ruot/ Biuo tloool Antron
fobric.

'*'!..rd f•
bric. SoNd 011&lt; wood trim.

Multk:olof

-IC -

'*

;"111~1;;:·:.,

a.,

$

549
. $995

Reg. f139~.
3 P\. . ContaiTipOIIf'VI

Eftm lilt._,., "-'1' 1b1101C1W1 ot M_.C_., ~.-,
cnfttcllrDII.,.,.....:I-.6Mprildud Mllstlildldlurdwod ••~
. . . . . I...U ltl
011 ulldllill

s••

Reg. f799.96
2 PI- e.tv ,.,_,,
ll\lfti.CDiol' Pllid ""'·
culon. •; Sullo!

UelncaHIII-... """"*'•·
flllot...,..._,-....ctN

...........

Reg. tl29.10

1

=."".!.-..: ......
saw.-.--.
INH I"'Nrfor. flw
~td . . . . .dlftCfn!FI.-d.
llAUTIAIL IUrrtl

$649

- "'""' - ...... $939
795 .........
~

1

.....

tw.ltdl

~

rnlrforl

OUTSTANDING!
8 PIECE WOOD DEN GROUP!
Rusdc pine living room groupo.

IINutllul Antron nvlon aav. ar
Her...lon Ploid oov•. Group includoo oofo. · rock•. coclllal
tlblo Mid two end_,
REG. 1899.95

'499

WAll UNITS!

plus much, muds mores

BIIUH't1
()pfY l

MATTRESS SETS REDUCED!

$

00

PECIAL OFFER•

•

A"hl~

&amp;
qnf1,

r1r n f'

I~

Wltll
li1t

1'1'11!

.1n

f11Hl

~lin 8Mgo
Sofll
~.
Ruot 1 81uo/

1

fobric.

Full . .
Sloop•.
Antron nylon print.
~·

--

IIEMJTW:UL COVtMSI

"-g. U29.1M1

Local bowling

Oftrk PmA f1n~hffl
PRif:Fn TO r,nt

Alg. . . ...

PRIUD
~ROM

$

v F-150 Plck·Ups v Ford Crown

v-Ranger
Plck·Ups
Except 'S' Model

LA Uitl

JANIL t N

SWIMWEAR
AND SPORTSWEAR
NEW FOR SPRING

BAHR

CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEP ORT
c~~;:;;

I

Prtced• 3llllcll...

I

I

piUS much. muc:llmoret

1

DINETTE SETS REDUCED'

Escort I
Mercury Lynx
Except Pony

over 2DD New Ford
cars And
.
savings!
I Engine Tune-Up Trucks Available For This Sale!

:a

I . $2995

"HURRY • LIMITED TIME OFFER"

$3495

4 -c~hfldtl

$3995
• Pr~ce includes 11\opo(l

components • Sel
timtng • ltlle adjustment
(Engmes equipped with greater
than 2·bbl carb and standard
~nil!on shghtly hi gher. ~

TURNPII&lt;E'S USED TRUCI&lt;S SALE!!!
1978 FORD
1980 CHEVROLET
1983 CHEVROLET
1985 FORD E-250
PICKUP

LUV

C-10 PICKUP

Stnck # 64751. V-8. iii cond.. auto. tran&gt;. PS.
P!l, bucltel ""Is. au. ~i.-y fuel lank

Stoclt # 50901. V-8. illlto. tran&gt;. PS. Pll n&lt;li~
tin,. ~ k&gt;n !idtu~ klng wide bed, rear ~ep
llJ l!l!lfl.

WAS

WAS

NOW

2"118" Solid ............... ...

STORES OPEN
THEIR DOORS TO
SAVINGS ACROSS
AMERICA FRIDAY!

on lhe Cape Cod
of Your Choice
• Choose the Unlbllt Home ol Your Choice
o Purchase It Now at Low Pre-Season Prices
1 Take Delivery Anytime Before June 1, t 986 and

SALE STARTS AT 10 A.M. SHA

NOW

$4495

C-10 PICKUP

$2495

Unlbllt Ho•s Will Sand You a
v
"Cash Back" Check' .
.

.. · t· . ,· .

$500

Cash Back
on the Ranch ·,
of.•
Choice

NOW

SIDd&lt; # 21696. V·8. auto ms.. PS. PO. ~ b&gt;n
p~ku~ bng wide bed, auxiiary luel ~·~
topper.

NOW

WAS

WAS

WAS

$7795

6 c~.. auto. trans . PS. Pll
NOW

Stoclt # 64311. 6 c~.. auto ms . PS. PB.
radill tres. ~ ton tJc!iup, lcng wide bed. mar
~llJI!I!Ifl
11011

ton p(:kup, long wll"l P ~1

tape. llJdlel ""~·

WAS

rr cmd..aulll.ms..PS.
lcng wide bed. rear step

SIDd&lt;! 63821. 6cyl..

P8.

~ t&gt;n jiclw~
bu ~~~'~"· gou

WAS

ae&lt;

$5595

NOW

NOW

$4595 $4395

NOW

$3395

VAN

Sk:lck H65803 VB iluto trans AM fM r7rfllfl

OOcXet seats. llW

WAS

$3995 $1995

'SIDd&lt; # 64742. V-8, aulll. trans .. PS. PB. loll
!ado. ~ l&gt;n picltup. llro wide bed rear step
llJmper, gouges.li!dog ron ~ass. St;D&lt;JCab.

WAS

$1195

1974

FORD
F1150 PICKUP

1981 GMC
PICKUP

NOW

WAS

$3195 $1995

SIDd&lt; # 65311, 2 doors, 4wl'eel dnve. V·B. atr
cond.. auto. trans., PS. PB.IolllfM rado.stereo

$5895 $4995

$6795 $6895

Price's In This
Selection
Good Thru
3/10/86.

NOW

Stock H5991. 6 rvl Ssoe&lt;'d. stand l'ans '

1979 J
CHEROKEE

1984 FORD
E-150 VAN
S~ck # 66421.

F-100 PICKUP

SIDd&lt;! 62071. V-8. 3 Sveed. \land trans. PS.
1.\l/ FM rad". ~ereo ~pe. ~ t&gt;n !&gt;Cku ~ tmg
wide bed. rear step bumper, pug&lt;&gt;

$5995 $4195

$5195 $6995

1975

1979 FORD
PICKUP

F-150 PICKUP

Sl&gt;clt # 63271. 4 c~.. 5 sveed. stand. trans,
1.\l/ FM radi&gt;. saeo !ape, k&gt;ng wide red, rear ·
~ep llJmper. inlermlt!nt \Otlers. bediner.

Cash Back

[~~~ ~

luel tank. gauges

1977

B-2000 PICKUP

:,.;... ... ~. . $1,000

Second Street· • Mason, W. Va.

au~lllar)'

WAS

$3495

J•'

co.

PR cru&amp;. conrrol.lolll fM r:rlo. "'"'''seats

$5595

$6795 $3695

7795

5

'14800

$6195

. ;
TO YOUR
, HU~fl~DUDS • ADD-ON
PRESENT ACCOUNT ...
, OFCW:FIQ~L
PARTICIP~TIIC • BANK CARDS WELCOME!

WAS

Sleek H3362. V·B a~rcond . auto nan&gt; . PS.

Stock # 50321. 6 cyl . aulo. !tans PS. Pa
M1 / FM rad ~:~. stereo taoe. ~ ton p.c~up. short
wheel base. •~'" ~ tear ~ass
NOW
WAS

WAS

•OPENANEW
ACCOUNT . ..

Stodl ! 65161. 4 c~ .. 4 si&gt;&lt;d. stand. trans..
1.\l/ FM rado, bog w~e bed. rear step
llJmper

"' ...... t&gt;ttln ........

.. - .

MASON
FURNITURE

CLUB WAGON

1985 FORD
RANGER 4X4

DINING ROOMS REDUCED•

CREDIT TERMS!

$7,999°0

REG. 1229.00
I

$2,496

ONLY TITLE AND TAXES EXTRA

3.8L

plus mUCh. much moret

AMIRICA'S GREATEST COAST·
TO-COAST SALE SPONSORED .
BY CIA NT BASSETT•
FURNITURE' IICINS
FRIDAY, MARCH 7tht

SALE
PRICE

•10,495

!Quality at I

litiPoiT ANT VA LUll

.... -

v Ford

Retail Price
Turnpike Discount

Stylngl Loci... lncludocl •ddlost
Eldnl

Club Choir!

llllc: wooct trm.
SUPER BUY!

2.3L

v-Mercury
Topaz

v Thunderbird 3.8L

RUSTIC IUIIK IEDI

Reg. 1489.96

Reg. f21t.96

tho famlr _,., A.._,m
or Gold llr fobric.

... 1?19.1&amp;

rock•.

v-E-150
Econollne Van

v Cougar

FORD F-15

v Ford Tempo

v-Bronco II

v Mustang

~ 1986

VIctoria
v-Mercury
Grand Marquis

10,495

f489.96

Sloopao. Brown pllid ""'·
culon fabric.

Including

5

CHAIRS ROCKERS &amp; RECLINERS•

Gold llllv• IWivel
Nlco ladloo' choir.

Annual Percentage
Financing Rate On Most

CARS AND TRUCKS

'"-W HoW/~ modilll. 1..ooa
ao-1- S~t~pe o... 1

I

• Get '100°0 F.REE!

o/a Ford Sponsored

•

• Inspect emission

rl

499 : :. "":. . -- $641
19900
... _
~9995
~I
s429 ,.. ...... .......... $]8.
$129
r;..-:c',:s~.:: $349 t;"f::.·~·~~ $299. ~=:1
:::.~~- ,. ,. .... $449
$245
...
="Ch~=
~......:snging ..- "" $2 39
e.tv AnMric:on S ' -1

Test Drive

Champion spark plugs

~ ~~

'" v1'

dr!IIN61' urth PtJ u •1 uq'•1

__:.:.......::_:::_..:_..::.:_::.:_-------:....._:------

Special pep rally
set at Meigs High
A special pre-district pep rally
will be held tonlghl at 7:30p.m. a!
the Lany Morrison Gymnasiumn
lor the Meigs Marauder boys
basketball learn.
'Ibe Marauders will compele in
the class AA dlslrict loumamenl a!
Ohio Unlversily's ConvocatiOn Cen·
ter Friday al8:45p.m. foUowtng I he
7 p.m. Portsmouth·Greenfleld
McClain tUS.
Arry available fan is urgl'd 10
attend. The MHS cheerleaders wUI
be on hand to organize a cheering
section for' Friday' s game. Tickels
will also be on sale for $3. Fan are
alerted that a $2 parking fee will be
charged al Friday's game .

1

I

muscle in the 52,51 win over close caUs in seclional play.
to fight o!f Ironton, 64-lil, in their Including McClain 's ·4746 thriller Trimble. and PorL&gt;mouth defea!Pd
Trimble last Saturday,' but will be Jackson defeated Portsmouth West
firs! game. All lhree of the other over Coach Carl Wolfe's Waverly Soulh Point 47-46 in second 'uund
nearly 100 per cenl.
$41 in the sectional ftnals, bul had
teams have had one-polnt wins Tigers, Meigs' 52·51 win over sec tional play.
Relying heavily on his two top r:============:::-:---,.--,.---...:...:..:......_.:..:__::~
scorers, dislricl CO'player of the
year Mike Chancey and Wise,
Drummer ll'els the differenC£' cou ld
be al small forward. 'We have to
have some production from our
smaU forwards, Shawn Baker,
Hpey Eason, and J . R. Kilchen. Lee
Powell also must have a good
game. I was very disappointed In
our bail movement and shot
selection in !he Trimble game.'
commented Drummer.
Greenfield McClain, coached by
the 1m Meigs grad Van Matre,
feature Tony Jackson, who shared
the district's MVP award with
Chancey, a &amp;-3 forward woo can
sooot tram outside and a good
all-around player. Drummer said
the Tigers have one ·very good
player (Jackson) and four hard·
working players who all do their
job.
McClain, the defending district
champion, wound up ranked 7th In
the AP stale poU, three notches
above Meigs. The Tigers lone loss
was to Circlev.ille late in the year,
!he sameweekendthatMeigs los! to
Warren Local for !heir only loss.
Portsmouth, a long·llme slrong
tournament school, is very young
and lalenled : The Trojans will
start lour oophomores and a junior.
One of t tJ:&gt; sophomores Is headed lor ·
Stock# 6353
stardom, all-district Jason Tubbs.
•'lz ton pickup
Drummer calls Tubbs a player woo
16
cyl . engine
can run the whole ball game. Tubbs
•Smndard
trans .
is the younger brolher of ex·
• Power brakes
Portsmouth all·slale and Miami .
•Gauges
University guard Craig Tubbs.
1C hrome bumper front
Despite the Impressive records,
all lour of the district's teams had
•AM radio
•Radial 1ires.

REO. I 1715.00

$179°0

SUPER IUVl

SOFAS &amp; SLEEPERS REDUCED'

milch.

RFG 9329 c!1

'-1 .,d lldbolrd.. eft-.

~.

Clllfl- 3 p;-. Coumy l1ylo
IIYtng ,_, ..... Said ... wllh
.._.,.. Throw pllowo "'

fo rrn 1c8 t op

..... .,."

$

LIVING ROOM SUITE!

WOOD DINETTE SET!
Fo u r solid p1ne c htur s Nlt h flEH11 1Ad
seaaand 36' 11 48 " trA&lt;ttln tahle wrt l-o

I

plus mucll, much moret

Reg. f749.95

5 PIECE

BEDROOMS REDUCED'

Go!

,..,.,..,.,,_,_

........
~=~=:.- . . $499

--sENSATIONAL!--

ATHENS - A real dogfight Is iri
store al the class AA lxlys' dlstricl
tDumarnent at Ohio University's
Convocation Center Friday as four
of southeastern Ohio's finest teams
attempt to advance along !he
tDumament trall.
''Ibere's not a team thai's no!
capable ofWtnningil. The team thai
plays two consecutive good games
will continue on and the rest go
home,' said Meigs Coach Greg
Drummer, who recently was
named the Southeastern Ohio Dis·
trtct co-coach of I he year along with
another toumamenl entry , Green·
field McClain's Rick Van Maire.
Portsmouth (10.7) takes on
Greenfield McClain t2H) 1n the 7
p.m. opener while Meigs (22·1) goes
against Jackson (]5. 7) In the 8: 45
p.m . finale. The two winners meet
at 7:30p.m. Saturday lor a berth in
the regtonals at Dayton next week.
AltHough beginning the year
slowly, Jackson wlll bring In a
red· hot five that ~won 10 of their
last 12 games. The lronmen have
good size and an outstanding point
guard In Mar.k Hammond . Jack·
son's Shayne Compston, Shayne
Poe, and Hammond were three of
the SEGAL's top seven scorers !his
year with Compston leadlng the trio
at 13.0 points per game. Hammond
was 12.6 arid POe l1.9.
Alllxlugh mosl eyes have pointed
towards a McClain·Meigs finale.
Coach Drummer knows his Ma·
rauders muSI be on the baU to
defeat Jackson, !he SEOAL's top
·rebounding team despile a 3·5
I'ECOrd. 'They're really an aggres·
sive, physical team while we are
moslly a finesse team . Jackson
srores as much off their rebounding
and free throws as they do In their
·offense. Hammond and Compston
are lxllh good outside shooters. U
we don't play aggressive, we can
forget about Sa lurday.' sa id
Drummer.
'file Marauders have been bit en
l7y the fiu·bug this week as Scolt
Powell, Shawn Baker, and Phil
King have all been affected, bul all
are expected to be ready. Also,
leading srorer and ace guard Rick
Wise slightly injured his thigh

'&gt; lf'P

burnoer

p.iiU~t'S

NOYI

$995

MANY
MORE TO
CHOOSE
FROM!!!

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Thursclav. March 6. 1986

BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION
~======ENJOY

By The Bend

' ,

COME IN AN HELP US CELEBR~TE OUR FlnH ANNIVERSARY.
CAKE &amp; COFFEE AND SAVE ON QUALITY HOME FURNISHING!

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday. March 6, 1986

Page-9

Rutland Garden Club has recent meeting
..

Plans for a therapy program at
the Gallipolis Develpmental Center
in March were mille when the
Rutland Garden Club met recently
at the home of Margaret Parsons.
It was noted that valentine plates
had been taken to the residents at
the Meigs Coonty Infirmary in
Feburary. Margaret Parsons
talked ontlu&gt; tuberculosis levy to be
wted on this spring and the club
voted to support the levy . An

50 SOFAS
&amp;
SECTIONAL$
By
BARCLAY 3 PIECE SECTIONAL - Very durable
Herculon velvet in gray and tan stripe.

FURNITURE CO .

MULTI-STRIPE TRADITIONAL SOFA

20°/o to 50°/o

1

lEG. S675.00

Sale

$49.9°0

BARCLAY LOOSE PILLOW BACK 2 PIECE SECTIONAL

::!~~~ ~,:~_:,1-

Marcia Ol'nison. CO·hostess, read
"Surprising Beauty" . from the
Upper Room and closro devotions
with prayer. The creed and collect
were given in unison and for roll call
members an swered with a com·
menton forcing slu·ubs.
The traveing prize was won by
Stella Atkins. and Anna Eli7.abeth
Turner will provide the pri7.e lor the
Ma rch mei'ting.
For the program Edith William·

Church .group honors seniors

REDiiCED

$9990°

Sale

invitation was rood from the
Wilkesville Garden Club inviting
members to anend their ~th
anniversary observanre on April1.
It was anoounred that Neva
Nichoilson wUI be instructing at a
worksiDponterrariumsforthenew
Friends and Flowers Garden Club.
Margaret Parsons gave devo·
lions reading "The Quiet Moment"
by William Fischer and "Let Christ
Olt" by James Dillon Freeman.

$7 88°0
GUY VELVD SOFA
=~~s~:~HING TOSS PILLOf.~e $38800

Senior citizens were moored at a
social held Saturday night at the
Midlepotl First Baptist Church.
A red and white cobr scheme
with a "love" theme decorated the
church social room. The potluck
dinner was sponsored by the Board
ri Christian Education which pro·
vided the creamed baked chicken,
rolls and beverages. A heart cake
was baked and decorated for the
occasion by Wanda Shank.
A special table tor the seniOr
citizens was decorated in red and
white and rentered with pepper·
mint carnations and red candies.

Heart napkins were used to carry
out tbe theme o! love.
"Best Sen.br Citizens Awards"
were (resented to WiUis and Katie
AntiDny, Milton and Freda Hood,
Jolm and Alwllda Werner. Ruth
Ebersbach; Ethel Hughes, Beulah
White, Gwinnle White, Nora Mills,
Caroline Miller, and Tony Fowler.
Jurvi&gt; KIOE'S gave the love scrtp.
ture from I Corinthians, and Donna
C{Ueser had a IX&gt;em. "If We Never
Meet" and commented on ttM&gt;
important role and example of
Christian seniOr citizens in the
church and the rommunlty. Maxine

Tucker talked on howspecialsenio r
citizens are and the program
concluded with a poem. "My
Rocking Olair" by Nora Mills.
The Rev. and Mrs. Earl Eden
entertained with a medley of love
songs with guitar acompaniment.
Planning the event were Marjorie
Waibum, Donna Grueser, Adele
White and Wanda Shank.

oak trim.

Sale

lEG. S788.00

Sal~l

BARCLAY KHAKI VRVO
TOSS PILLOWS.

$599°0

lEG.

:!lura

Sale

sns.oo

REG. S799.00

3 PC.

FAMOUS LA-Z-BOY and ACTION RECLINERS

LOFT BED

•ROCKER RECINERS •WALL SAVERS

IN OAK
INCLUDES 4 DRAWER
CHEST, SH.ELF AND
CLOSET

STYLES

Sale

$299

TO CHOOSE
FROM

lOver 100 on Sale)
ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS

UP
TO

Dinettes

20°/o
50°/o

to

OFF

1/2 OFF

lEG. S4f19.00

S2SSOO

$1/e

. REG. S440.00

$329°0

$1/e

ALL LIVING ROOM TABLES

MERBMAif

REDUCED

'lA~

20

..a==··

TO

ON SIMMONS AN STEARNS &amp;FOSTER QUALITY BEDDING
QUEEN SIZE SO SI-ONS
GOLDEN VALUE I

Sill 519900

REG. t380.00

TWIN SIZE SET COMMERAnVE

$499

Reg . 11099

.~v yency f{ouse .Cfnr

OODS &amp; ENDS

60°/o OFF

WAREHOUSE CLOSE-OUT SALE PRICES

ssoo.oo

Twin, Full and Queen
size sleep sofas, all with SALE PRICES STARr AT ONLY
innerspring mattresses FULL SIZE
and soap and water Reg. 1799
washable fabriu.
Over 1S sleepers
in stock.
QUEEN SIZE

$269°0

Manutacfurers And Importers o' Fine Home furnJahlnos

75°/o

SIMMONS HIDE·A·BED, LA·Z·BOY and
STEARNS &amp; FOSTER SOFA SLEEPERS
SAVE AS MUCH AS

BEAUTYREST ~~~~~
~!~i.oo

$599

BEAUTIFUL
SELETION OF SOLID

BRASS
LAMPS
REG. s12 5.00

saaoo

s,,,S2 8800

MIS-MATCHED SETS
DlfCONllNUED COVERS

PRE-SEASON

PATIO FURNITURE SALE

ALL PIECES WITH SPECIAL PRICES FOR OUR ANNIVERSARY SALE

FURNITURE
'SHOWCASE
•Free Parking
•Free Delivery

SINGING SUNDAY -Tiny Smith andfamtzy ,'PokttPieasant, will be
slnglng,SundaymonmgandevenlagaltheRudandCIIurehri.GodiiiMI
a.m. and 7 p.m. Youth Sunday will be obstrved also wllhteensteachlng
all Sunday school cluses. Putor Jolm Evans mvlles lbe public.d

•
M ezgs

t'J honor, .YO~t~t
.,,. •If --

&lt;/"

~oun

Thf' t hird six w('('ks grading ptliod hOoor
roll 31 tht&gt; MelliS Hl&lt;h Sdiool has """"

an noul'lCI'd. MaklnR a fU'ock&gt; o! Bu r abov(' In

all t ht'b· subj('('ISto tr namoo to thrrou werr:
Gr&lt;~&lt;k' 9: N lrol~ Bunch. ~loci Carl.
Charles Ca rson, Elb.abeth Ewln~ . Marc
Corst. Stacv Da lloo. T&lt;'t'ry · f'k'lds . Tam!

Hottman. JOdy (..('l¥ln~mwt, Amy LuckE'VOOo.
£llzabt:&gt;th Mci£or, Scott Mt&gt;lton. Man~

Taylor. Mlr h(&gt;lk&gt; Tayk:Jr . Monica Turner.

ALL ITEMS
SUBJECT TO
PRIOR SALE

•Open Daily to 5 P.M.
Mon. &amp; Fri. to 8 P.M.

* 3 DOOR PRIZES *
COME IN AND REGISTER
FIRST PRIZE:

5 PC. PAnO GROUP BY LYON SHAW, GASS TOP TABLE WITH 4

CUSHIONED CHAIRS.

"Where Customer Satidaotion Is
Our Main Concern."

SECOND PRIZE:

Corner of Third &amp; Olive
Gallipolis

THIRD PRIZE:
FOURTH PRIZE:

NO HANDS CHAISE LOUNGE BY
SAMSONITE
1 PAIR CERAMIC TABLE LAMPS.
YOUR CHOICE OF COLOR.
ovAL DECORAnVE MIRROR.

618 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Open 9 A.M.·6 P.M. WHkdays; 9-5 Sat.
APPOINTMENTS AVAilABLE-PH. 992·3795

1986
LINCOLN
TOWN
CAR

Amy Well
Reporter

Nrl.WI. Todd P!J.vcll, Troy Qual ~. Darin
Roach, Tina Rorrljne, Jared Shl&gt;t&gt;ls. Jody

STARTING
AT

THE lttCOME TAX PEOPI.E

tion

CHAIRS

SWIVEL ROCKERS
GLIDE ROCKERS
WING BACKS
LOUNGES
OCCASIONALS

OVER 40

lEG. SJSO.OO

S38800

Sale

H&amp;R BLOCit

The Triple R's mel Ja nuary 19 at
the home of Joan Smith with three
oovisors an&lt;' 13 members attend·
ing. The follol\1ng officers were
elected: President , Amy Hagar;
Vice President , Ay Mora; Secre
tary, Todd Wilson; Treasurer, Jay
Swain. Dues were decided on at
S2.00 a year, and members agreed
that each one would pay for his/her
own books.
After the meeting, Joan Smith
served cake, Doritoes, and Ice
cream. The next meeting will be
tM&gt;ld at Linda Wil son's house on
February 27. at 6:00. At the next
mreting Aaron Wilson will demon·
str ate his bow and arrow and Amy
Hager will do a cooking demonstra·

BAICLAY 3 PIECE SECDONAL WITH INCLINERS.
REGANT PEACH AND GRAY FLORAL SOFA- With

H&amp;R Block could put lhe two together for you'

4-H news '

Sale

lEG. S1880.00

SOLD YOUR RESIDENCE?
WANT ABIGGER REFUND?

son read "Let It Be Spring" by
Sylvia Marlin . Margaret Belle
Weber JX"esented "The Experts
Gu ide to Growing Blue Ribbon
Houseplants" from Family Circle.
and Ruth Erlewine had "Hou se
Plant Pests and Treatment" from
Women's Day. She used a chart on
basic nutrient deficiency.
Dorothy Wodardread 'America's
Greatest Gardener, Our Third
President." ·
An armgement entitled "Winter
Oleer" was displayed by Neva
Nicholson. The !Vi'xt meeting will be
on March 24 with Mrs. Weber and
Pauline Atkins as hostesses.

Mells.ow. Woods , Renet" Y.oung.
GradP 10: Rose Ann BallE'\', MariOrl&lt;'
Bak('f, David ~lf!. Ca t~ Bil'!'istn,:. Jodi
Brown . Penny Dark , M£'1 15sa Clay. ShP!"T'\1
~- Scoll Haninll. Ol:.&gt;E'anna HE'ndl"rsori.
KP\1n \ '. Kin~ Audr{'\1 La mbt•rt Palrlda
McChf-f&gt;. Scou ' ClberhOb.t'f. Donh~ Poolf'l"',
Shannon Slitvln. Davkt Sm.Jth. Mayr('fle
Thomas, Eli1.alx'lh 'Thornton. StE'\1'11 Trocv.
Sa.ndr&lt;~ VanCOCJnt"V.
.
CradC' 11 : Ertn'Ander!OO. Jeffrey Arnold.
sandra BallPy, MlrtK&gt;IIE' Barr. Donna BcMien.
Paul Brlcklt"!i, llona ButchK ; Cathy Can('f.
fb&gt;hecca Chase A.prll Qark Marty Qlne
Timot hY COl~. lfutx1"1 Eas00, 1..,00; Eblin:
Rl:l!:ln a· Eblin , La ura Farlw. Mary Flagg,
M~ is~t F'a&gt;tt'&gt;!', JOSl'ph Haddox. Qu-~lopht&gt;r
Hanlnli! . Krist\ Ha~· nes, Shannon Hlnd_y,

The Meigs 4·H Pleasure Riders
had a meeting February 17 at the
St. Pau l Lutheran Chu rch. Seven
members and 2 advisors were
present. It was suggested that the
mt('tings be held at members'
homes so they can give dernonstra·
lions . The club talked abou t project
tooks for the year.
The next meeting 1\111 be on
March 17 . with roll call being on
.~sls~tlJr&gt;;esiliA~ this dtill.g
~ritkln /!d~e ca,vee a~d ~~~:

Chrl'itlne Hysell, Darrl Hy!lf'll. Julie H~ ll .
Dawn K«Sl'(' , Darla Kl n~. Phillip Kin~.
Susa n Kin~ . Dlnny l«&gt;nard. Kenneth
MrC.lf&gt;llan. Judi ME&gt;t&gt;s, Jennlft'f Miller.
William Moldrn, Stcvm Musser. Mlch('!lc
Pt&gt;ter!IOO, Kathy Plekens. ~Ia Pl.er('(',
Scott Powf' ll , Amy Radell ln. Melissa Rile
Chrryl Rous h. Tracey Srholdrrtl'. Krl.&lt;i
&amp;&gt;xtoo. Dia na Sll'k, Bmlda Slnclalr. David

Jeff Arnold

News Reporter

Alfred Liv estock 4·H Club held a
mf('tlngat the home of Charles an d
Rose Carr on February 23. Ten
members and three advisors were
present. the members taking
iambs went to Carr's barn to look at
baby lambs. The group ta lked
about how much 1he pigs and iambs
had to weigh and how much they
nred to gain. Members taking pig
projects will go to farms to look at
pigs.
The next meeting is March 16 at
the C11 rr res idence at which time
the money should ix' turned in for
ai lttM&gt; items sold.
Michele Guess
News Reporter

Smirh, Mark Smit h, M('llnda Smith, Mt&gt;lissa

SprouSt&gt;. Rnchr l Stwlr. Donald Strln. Ml·
ch£111f' StPvens. KlmbA'ly StPtVart . Jmnllff

~·artz, Al ida VanMeter. Jodlt&gt; W('lls. [);m:ll
Welsh.
Crack&gt; 12: &amp;&gt;cky Birchfield . li£' \di Cobb,
Daphne&gt; Dillard. Kenda Donohw. Anila
Edwards . Chark&gt;s Fitchpatrlck . C.ina f'oiirod. Brtan Gibbs. Char i('S Gil k£'1'son. CaroiC"
Gilkey. TammiC' Gi lkey. Darren Ha~·('S ,
Bryan Holk_o)·. Clndy Holley, Brian HoodashrH, MeiLc;s.a Howard. Chr\s t~tl{'f Krnnroy .
R.odJ1t&gt;:.r Kk&gt;ln . Parkff-l onR. Joseph Manley,
Chrl51opher MrGhN&gt;. A.my Molden . .JudiTh
MOW('I)', ~h&lt;'JIY Ohllnp:rr. lRC' , PCM'r ll.
Mt'lls sa Pri mml'r, Julie Rou sh. Cl\erl Sa ut ers, a ndy Saulers. Chrls lllJlx&gt;r Shank, I&gt;avki
&amp;ilulft'. Ann Sl&lt;'$lfr\E'd. VaiA'I&lt;' Simpson.
Julie SLsson, T1mot hy Sloan. Anlt;t Smith,
Carol Smith. Laura Smith, Charfn(&gt;l£&gt;Thrn Pr.
David Wal1h. Bryan Woodya rd .

Meigs SWCD plans for project
Mit ch Farley. Environmental
Scient ist with the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources Division of
Reclamation, mN l\1lh tlu&gt; Meigs
Soil &amp; Water Conserva tion District
Board of Supervisors recently and
reviewed reclamation progress and
plan s for tbe coming year. Farley
reported that the Pagevllle 2
Project is scheduled to begin in late
May or June.
Robert First, Distric t Conserva·
tlonist. reported on the Conserva·

11on Reserve Program tCRPi.
Fields determined eligible will be
3.5 times the tolerance level. Sign up
for the CRPwUl be March 3·14,1986.
David BW'I, District Technician.
r'f'Ol'led that we can pu rc hase a
gear driven Acreage Counter for
the rom planter.
In othe r business. a Cooperator
Agrt('ment was signed for Rodney
Keller In Chester Township. Opal
Dyer was given pennission to
attend Secretary's Seminar on

March 5 &amp; 6 in Columbus .
Final plans were made for Poster
and Essay Cont ests pres&lt;&gt;ntations
scheduled for March 3,4,7, and 10.
Those pres&lt;&gt;nt for the meeting
besides thosc named above were
David Gloeckner. Tom Thel~s. Alan
Holler. Rex StM&gt;nefield. Rodney
Olevalier. and Ned Dooley.

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

~~~ic§~~

Quality at I
a savings!

Layette shower given for child
A surprise shower was held
recently for Olristopher Jon Circle,
born on Dec. 14, son of Olris and
Petra Circle, Racine. Becky, Sonia
and Cindy Circle hosted ttM&gt; shower.
Ca ke mints. nuts, coffee and tea
were served. Sue Hager won the
door prize, and game prizes went to.
Sheila Spencer and Jean Cleek.
Others attending and presenting

-·

.

-

gifts were Alysia urcte, tJecl&lt;)• and
Harold Circle. Jeff. Nlk i and
Jeffrey Circle, Cindy, Steve and
Stephanie Circle, Lula Circle. [)o.
rothy Harden, Elsie Whit e, Sheila,
Dantelle and Tiffany Spencer,
Florence Clrl'le, Jinny Cleek, Elsie
and Douglas Circle, Virginia and
Woodrow Fortney, and Nancy and
Ca rt Circle.

Fowler birthdays celebrated

FRONT REMAS

DISC BRAKE
SERVICE
I

S3295

1.
1

o Replace disc brake pads
o CK. front rotors •Inspect
master cylinder/calipers
(repairs extra) • Repack
wheel bear~ng s · re place front
grease seats 11 opplicable
• Road test

I
I
J!'llnifer Fowler, eight, and Chas· SwlstM&gt;r, Donald and Michael, I
ity Dawn Fowler, three, observed Katherine and Carolyn Fowler, Mr. I
their birthdays recently with a and Mrs. Ricky Fowler. Ronnie I

party at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Jeffery Fowler. Middleport.
Ca ke, punch and Ice cream were
served to the guests, Crystal
Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. Roger

Bass, Ru~ii Fowler, Becky Wise,
Diana Davidson and Sabra. and
their grandmother, Mildred
Fowler, and J. J . Fowler.

.

Senior Citizen have meeting
The Rev. Lamar 0. Bryant of the
First Southern Baptist Olurch,
Pomeroy, was speaker at the
recent meeting of the Scipio
Township Senior Citizens held at
th«&gt; firebouse.
Millard Christian, president , con·
dueled the meeting and introduced

the minist er who usro as his topic, .
"The Salt of the Earth." Refresh ·

I
I
I
I

COOPER

CHRYSLER, PLYMOUTH
DODGE, INC.
MIDDLEPORT

992·6241
...
merttS were served folowing lhe I •
8-&amp; MON .-F RI. llliillo
meeting. Next ITII.'eting wUI be held 1
on March 21 al6 p.m. at which time ,
a dinner wUI be held lor those· ,
having birthdays in January. Frlr
ruary nad March.
~~~~~;;~!!f!!!!!I!U=a

Compare This Equipment
•5.0· 1iter V-8 engine
•Sequential multi-port electronic fuel
injection
•Electronic Engine Control~
•Automatic overdrive tr.,smission
•Automatic Climate Control air
conditioning
•Power steering
•Power brakes
•Power door locks
•Power side and vertt windows
•Tinted glass
•Twin comfort lounge seats with six-way
power driver's seat and manual seat recliners
•AM / FM Electronic Cassette stereo
search radio with four speakers and power
antenna
•White sidewall, steel-belted radial tires
•A nalog clock

•Electronic waming chime
•Luxury tilt steering wheel
•Fingertip speed control
•Automatic parking brake release
•Interior lighting· group
•Interval windshield wipers
•Passenger·side visor vanity mirror
•Deluxe color-keyed seat belts
•Dual power heated mirrors
•Cornering lamps
• Charcoal bumper rub strips
•Luxury Coach Roof
•Comfort Convenience Group
•Glamour Peint
•Keyless Entry System
•Aluminum Wheels
•Leather Wrap Wheel
•Bodyside Protection
•Stock # 6557

$3,004. oo Discount
SUGGESTED RETAIL:
TURNPIKE DISCOUNT:

s

$24,199° 0
$3,004. 00

I
ONLY TITLE AND TAXES EXTRA

·aa

�.~J

·«

: . Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Thunday, March 6, 1986

,..

..

Wsmetic dentistry·has remedy for dental problems -·.......

••

People have long been concerned
with maintaining oral health and
leellng good. Improved dental
techniques and a growing oody of
knowledge about oral health care
have virtually guaranteed !be
achievement of ti'O'se twin goals.
. Now, owing to rapid changes In
. dental technology and materials ,
people can focus on looking good,
too. And changing their smile !~?Ips
many individuals to change tbeir
self-Image - for the ll?tter!
Whatever Ill? problem - be It
chipped, gapped, stained, or discolored teeth - cosmetic (estll?tlc)
dentistry probably has a remedy
for It. Esthetic dentistry uses a
variety of materials and methods to
Improve appearance and, )n 9:lme

cases. to make teeth function llke
new. Treatment Is easy and
Inexpensive, and it Involves llttle if
any drUllng.
According to an article llJbllshed
in ttl? journal "Dental Management" (IlEc. 1983). ttl? most
rommonly pertlrmed cosmetic
procedures are lengtll?ning and
repairing front teeth (incisors),
repairing fractures, f1lling cavities
with tooth-colored materials. clos-·
ing gaps, and restoring tEeth
traumatized by accidents.
But IDday, just about any dental
procedure can be classified as
"cosmetic." Dentists are concerned not only with keeping tEJ&gt;th
healthy; tll?y also aim to correct
nature's "mistakes." And tll?y do

this by carefully selecting ttl?
procedures and materials that wUI
ll?lp a patient's teeth look as natural
as possible.
Most dentists would agree that
oondlng Is ttl? one technique that
has I'E'\Ioluttonlzed ttl? estll?tlc
aspect of dentistry. It also has the
greatest variety of cosmetic appll·
cations. Bonding Is a general term
that describes 11'0' attaching, or
bonding, of a plastic or porcelain
material to the tooth surface.
During ttl? first step In bonding, a
weak acidic 9Jlutlon Is applled to
tooth enamel to slightly roughen tbe
surface ri. the tooth being treated.
This acid-etch technique helps the
oondlng material adhere. A Uquld
oondlng material (resin) Is then

mooe ot porcelain or acryllc. The
enamel is etched, an adhesive resin
Is placed on ttl? tooth, and ttl?
preshaped laminate veneer Is then
pared on top of ttl? resin.
Among the other techniques
dentists often use to Improve the
appeara11,~ of teeth are the
following:
Oral prophylaxis (professional
cleaning) ; to remove stains on the
surface o! teeth;
Bleaching, to lighten stains
within ttl? teeth;
Omtourlng, to Improve ttl? shape
&lt;t treth:
Crowns or "caps," to Improve ttl?
tooks and strength ri. badly decayed
,.. weakened teeth;
Ortlrldontlc treatment, to correct

applied to ttl? tooth's roughened
surface.
The next step depends on ttl?
problem being treated. In some
cases, ttl? dentist wUI apply a
plastic matenal called a composite
resin to ttl? tooth. The composite
resin Is then shaped to rebuild or
replace ttl? missing part of the
tooth. After being shaped, the resin
Is hardened eltll?r through a
chemical process or by brief
exp:lsure to a special curing Ugh!.
Finally, !be surface Is p:ltished and
finished .
In &lt;XII?r cases, especially on front
teeth or on teeth that are badly
stained, the dentist may bond a thin
laminate veneer to the tooth
surface. Lamlnate veneers are

- '{.·&gt;if "·

Beat of the bend

Looking for alumni
By BOB HOEF1JCH
Sentinel Stall Writer
I know. It is cold and alumni
reunions see,m a
long way off.
Howev er, It
won't be that long
and getting a
good start is ttl?
Racine-Southern
Alumn i Assn.
which has set it s annual reunion
and banquet for May 24. The group
• i); already working towards sending
invitations. If you know of alumni
interested in receiving invitations
- someone who has moved would you please send the name
and address to the as!DCiation at
P.O. Box 292. Racine, Ohio 45m ?
Also any individual who wou ld
like a list of fellow grads for reunion
purposes, all you have to do is
contact JoyC&lt;' Quillen. alumni
secretary. at the alumni address.
If you would like any other
information phone Joyce at 94 !\-24~
durtng the day or at ll?r ho'!le
949-2690. Other acti\·e members this
year who might be able to help :-ou
• with any· questions a('{' Betty
Wagn~r. Dale Hart. Tim Thoren
and Larw Fisher.
Many of you know James M
Jen nings because of his work with
county groups over the past few

years.
· Jennings, chief executive offi&lt;w
of James M. Jennings Associates. a
Columbus consulting firm specia liz·
ing in rommunit y and businf'Ss

planning plus ecooomic devetopmC'nt, has recC'i\"E:&gt;d the honor ary

life member destl(llat ron from the
American Econqmic Development
CouncU.
Tht&gt; honor was bestowed in
:recognition of long and distingusihed service in furt herlng the
economic di'Vf'lopmcnt profession
and the educa tion goals of the
Council which was established in
1926.
Over the past liO ,·mrs only .l i
other (X'rsons ha,·e r..-ein\l this
hooo r in the L'nitcd Slatrs and

Can&lt;K!a and only one &lt;XII?r person
from Ohio has been 9J hooored 9:1
you can seo It isn't just handed out
frerly.
Jennings is c&lt;Hllrector &lt;t ttl? Ohio
Basic Ecnomic Development
course taught each spring at Ohio
State University. He was the first
president of ttl? Ohio Development
Assn.. serves on ttl? ooard ot
direc tors of ttl? association and
chairs the group's education
commlttff' .

or applications brms by contacting

the branch &lt;ifi('(' &lt;t the association
at 5278 Richland Aw .. P.O. Box 219.
Athens or call 592-108).
Hats off to the local models who
will be raking part in l'hP style show
being Sp:lnsored by the R&gt;meroy
Arra Merchants Assn . this rmnth.
Thr\· havr IJe(&gt;n p:lsing out of doors
in their spring outfits - without
coats - in frEezing tE'mperatures
for Thr Sentinel ca meras. And
gue;s what. Amld tlr go= rumps
and all the puflllr. they krpt
smlling.

MTDDll':POR'f - E\·an ~J ine
Chapter. Or&lt;i&lt;'r of Eas!Prn Star.
mf'(lts ar 7· .10 p.m.

Thursda~·

a!

Middlrp:lt1 ~ asontc Temple: ofl ic ·
ers to wmr srrwr drrsSf's .
POMEROY - Stat)· hour for
preschoolers. 2 p.m. Thursday at
Pom('ro~·

! .l brar:.·.

SYRACUSE - The Mrigs As9:l·
elation or Retar·dcd CtttZens wil l
mr&lt;'t Thursday. 7 p.m.. M Ca rlrtoo
School.
POMEROY -Faith Tabernacle
Cllun:h on Bailey's ftu n Rd wrll be
in revh·aJ Thursdav through Sun dal ~&lt;i lh mf'f'tings at 7:.10 p.m.
nightly. f:\wyone welcome.
EAST MEIGS - Eastern At
hletic Boosters wtll be hosting the
Harlem All-Stars Thursda y. 8 p.m.
Adm ission for all thrf'l' games is $3
tor adull s. $2.50 for studen ts grades
7-12 and S2 for grades J.6.

:

POMEROY - Salisbury Town shipTrustees wUJ meet Thursday, 7
().m.. at the town ship hall on Rock
~rings Rd .
FRIDAY

. : ROC K SPRINGS Meigs
• tounty Pomona Grange will meet
i Friday, 8 p.m.. at the Rock Springs
,\ Grange Hall. Harrisonvil le Grang&lt;&gt;
! w111 host. 11te National Grange
; :;ewtng Contest wUI be held. All
: members urged to attend.
; &gt; POMEROY - MelgsCountyFox
• l:;JJasers Association meets Friday,
_( 7· p.m. at Ill? club house on Eagle
; Jtjdge.
SATURDAY
MIDDlEPORT - The Middleport Uterary Club will meet

Saturday at 2 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Car l Hork)•. ~ rs. Horky will
re\·i&lt;&gt;w the book. "The Sl.&gt;rond TrEe
from the Cornrr" b,· E. B. White,
CI U!hor.

111LKES\1LLE - Wilkesville
P)·thian Sist!'rs are Sp:lnsoring a
smorgasbord dinner a t the Wilks·
,·r llr 1')1 hian Hall. Sa turday. from 5
to 8 p.m. Adults $4 . Children Sl.~ .
E,·r~·onr wrl romr
PO~ROY

- Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter a &amp; ta Sigma Phi Sorority
will have a SwE&lt;&gt;tlrart Dan('('
Sarurda~· . 8 p. m .. ar rtr senior
cit izen's building in Pomeroy.
SYRACLSE - Regist ration for
participation in the 1986 Syracuse
Youth League will be held Sa rurd"Y· March 8. from 10 a. m. to 12
noon and Wednesda~· . March 12.
from 6 to 8 p.m., at ttl? Syracuse
Municipa l Building.
POMEROY - A traders day will
li' txold Saturday at ttl? Meigs
County Fox Hunt ers' cabin on
Eagle Ridge.
MIDDLEPORT - AU boys and
girls . 5 through 15, Interested in
pl aying baseball or softball in
Middleport this summer are asked
to sign up Saturday at the Meigs
Junior High School from 11 a.m. to 2
pm. Registration fee is SIJ.
POMEROY - Youth League
ruseball and softba ll sign up at
Elberfeld's Department Store Saturday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
RtiTLAND- Bowhunters Assn.
meeting 'Satunlay, 7 p.m. at
clubhouse; also reservations lor
annual banquet on AprU 12 being
taken , with Pau[or Jackie Searls to
be contacted.
GALLIPOUS - Western style
square danae sponsored by Grande
Squares Dance Club, 8 to 11 p.m.
Saturday at St. Peter's Episcopal
Olurch, Galllpolls, with Bill D1rby

PARTICIPATINC

Long Bottom·
news notes
By MELODY BOBEln'S
Recent visitors at the Millard

Ball home were Mr. and Mrs.
Dougte Ball and Carol, Montgo.
mery, W.Va .. and Mr. and Mr.
Harold Ball of Columbus.
Visitors at the Ernie Griffins
lrlme have been Larry and Grace
Griffin. Racine, Joe an~ Debbie
NoD. Belpre; Phllllp Griffin, Par·
kersburg, and Jim and Pam
Stettler, Tuppers Plains.
Martin Nesselroad 1s In the
extended care unit ol Veterans
Memorial Hospital and friends are
planning a card shower to ·cheer
him.
Gladys Shumway who makes her
home with Chester and Dorothy
Wells Is a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Ernt'stine Hayman Is In Lancas·
ter visiting relatives and whlle
there wUI be attending a flower

IU
Pho"' CCI· 1405
Celli,elia

BEDROOM SUITES INCLUDE DRESSER;
. MIRIOR, CHEST, 'ED OR
HEADBOARD, NIGHT TAILE, IAILS
OR BED FlAMES.

SCIENCE EXHmrrs - Mike Walls, left, has
corl'ltructed equipment which takes salt water and
separales the salt from the water usinl propane to
provide heat which contributes to the evaporation
process. Another eighth grader, Jim Dur!!l, has Itt led

his exhibit, "Diglng Worms

Ire Sctenllftc' WRif."

Rusty Bookman, science teacher, and James

Carpenter, assislanl superinteuclenl ri. the Meigs
Local School District, look on as ttl? two students .
prepare for the scletree fair.

Science fair conducted at school
The third annual Meigs Junior
High School science fair will .be ll?ld

at the high school Wednesday with
open house from 7 to 8: ll in the
evening for parents and friends to
vtew the exhibits.
All or ttl? eighth grade physiclal
science students of Rusty Bookman

and Jesse Vail will be having
exhibits In the science fair. A team
of six. consisting of four U. S. Navy
officers from the Columbus f«&gt;.
cruiting Center. Russ Moore and
John Costanza of the Meigs County
Board of Education office. wUl be

judging the exhibits all day
Wednesday.
Ratings of superior, excellent.
good and fair will be made by the
judging team with all students to
receive certificates.
Superior ratings will be eligible to
compete In the district competition
to be held at Ohio University In
April.
Four special Governor's Awards
will be presented. They will be in
the categories of food science.
agriculture, energy use and water
ronservatlon .

LAurel Cliff Women
conduct meeting
The Women 's Missionary F'PIIow·
ship Internal ional oft be Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church met rer&lt;'ntly at the home of Donna

c allin~ .

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Sisson Family,
gospel singers, will be at !be
Pomeroy Church ci ttl? Nazarene,
COrnt'r &lt;t Union and Mulberry ,
Su nday a! 9:ll a.m. for combined
services; pastor Rev. Thomas
Glenn MCc lung invites the llJblic.

LO\\'ER PLAINS- Hymn sing
at F'rwwUI Baptist Church on
Route 682 on Lower Plains Road,
Sunday. 2 p.m. with Ol d Time
Religious Singers to be fea tured.
Pastor Eddie Boyer invites the
rt~bllc.

Gilmore with Wanda Eblin an d

DOORS
OPEN:

were given balloons with messages
inside which they read. Kay Clark
told about her salvatIon. and
Wanda Eblin commented on t.?r
favori te Valentine's Day. An ans·

wered prayer request was noted by

Jean Wright.
A SUfllrise tin hday party was
held for Mary Miller following ttl?
meeting. Eva Robson received the
friendship basket, and otll?rs ('{'·
ceiving prizes were Bonnie Friend
and Mary Miller. Jean Wright hoo
ttl? closing prayer. Others attendIng were Iva Powell, Evelyn
Young, Shirley Meadows, Genevieve Ward, Beulah Oehler. Judy
Wolle, Norma Sa ker. Becky Eblin ,
Arnie Friend, and Janice Haggy.

IT ENDS SATURDAY, MARCH Bth, NO EXTENSIONS!

CHERRY

BEDROOM SUITE

$78811

~~99.95

~~-~~
I I

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..,.,~

REVOLUTt NA

STORE CLOSED UNTIL 6 P.M. FRIDAY!

TO ALLOW SPEaAL CRIWS TIMI TO RIDUCI PRICIS ON IVDY
111M IN EVIRY DEPAR I MENT, NOT JUST BASSETT®, EVERY'THINGII
LIVING ROOMS REDUCED'
l~t.

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12 S.ssi0011 leg. $40 NOW I 3500

Yestetday's Traditions

SHEll DESIGNS
U.IMED

At Today's Prices

... It J9'1.9S SOil.
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rustic style.
llof. 11499.95 SOFA,
CHAIIt, lltut plaid
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leg. 11199.95 u .
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..:!::"·.............
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588 88
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W· lnnP rspnnq Queen Mottr l' n

log. 12ft9.9S
stCnONAL w/incliMrt and sloepor,
lotip COVII, by
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•DOOR PRIZES •DEMONSTilnONS lll DAY

G , ANN y'S ( ,A,..TS

Reg. IS99.9S
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piUs IIIUCII,IIIUCII maret

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Made '" lJ.S A

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Today's Auditions tailored looks are distinc·
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auditions®

26396SIT

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FRIDAY!

QUEEN SIZE SET

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY1 MARCH 7 &amp; I
9 A• M. nL 5 p• M.

,..--------------------.....;=---!

SANDY'S BOUTIQUE

SHOP THE SALE 2~ HOURS

Husbands night was planned for
March ~ at the fl'l'ertt meeting of
the Middleport Child Cooservation
League held at the Pizza Hut.
The evening wUI begin with a
p:ltluck dinner at the Rock Springs
Grange hall and will include a white
elephant sale. Clarice Kenlll'dy
provided the traveling ptlze W- ·
nated by Thelma Sines. Devotions
were given by Ann Colburn who
read "I Thought of You Today."

128 MULBERRY AW.

FRIDAY!

6 P.M.

CCL meets

lt. 62

THAT
ENTIRE
HOUSE•ut.
OFFIN!NEW
FURNITURE
CAN BE YOURS!
BUY3 , 4, 50R
MORE ROOMS OF
FURNtTURt: AND
SAVE HUNOREDS
AND HUNDREDS DF
DOlLARS NOW!

83 ~ RYRIU\IIL~I

GRAND OPENJNG &amp;
OPEN HOUSE

Brenda Haggy as co-hosts.
Eva Robson gave devol ions using
Psalms 9 and also had a reading,
"BiessedAssurance."Prayerwas
by Shirley Friend. World Day of
Prayer was announced for Friday.
Bonnte rrlend presented the
program. "Let the Son Shine
Through Love ... Several members

EXTRA...

ASSIST YOU!

Dora Crispin left Saturday to live
In Akron with her daughter. Mrs.
Crispin has been active with the
Senior Citizens Club and was
presented with a farewell cake and
gifts at Tuesday's meettitg.
Guests at the hoJlle of Mr. and
Mrs. PaulHauberandMelodyhave
been Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bowles,
Pomeroy. and Carolyn Adams and
daughers, Sara and Crystal
Stewart.

Community calendar / area happenings
TJruRSD.o\ Y
POME ROY - The Eas tWrs t
Sl.•r;-icr l 'nits of tho Brg Bend's
Black Diamond Gi rl Scout Dts tricl
will m!'f't at 7 p.m. Th ursda~ · at
Crace Eptscopal Church.

'860FFICIAL

show.

He is a past pres ident of t be Ohio
Planning Conferrnce a nd serves m
its ooard ol directors . He is
president of the Ohio Planning
Foundati::&gt;n.
The Jennings firm has provided
consultant services to the Meigs
County Regional Plannilng Commission for a number of years .
I have no way of knowing how
many Meigs County youngsters are
afflicted wit h asthma bu t I do want
ro mention tha t they can take part
in traditional camping experiences
this summer through ttl? Camp
Superkids program sp:lnsored by
the American Lung Assn .
Two week-long sessions are held
at Ca mp Mowan a. a Lutt.?ran
Church r amp ncar Mansfield and
partici pating youn gsters are
broken int o age groups. A varied
program iS held and ttl? staH
members arc considered !be best
speeialists in the field of pulmonary
carr for childrl'!l.
II you ha,·e an interest in the
camp )llU can g&lt;&gt;t rroreinforrnation

t

ttl? p:lSitlon of ttl? teeth:
Oral (orilrlgnathlc) surgery, to
oorroct 9:lme facial abnormalltles,
such as a jutting jaw.
No treatment Is Slllted to every
problem or to every person. If
yoo 're dissatisfied with the way
your teeth look, ask your dentist
what can be done to meet your
particular needs. '

588 88

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FREE

1st Anni~ersary Special
JORDACHE POLO
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CREDiT TERMS!

12 COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM-SIZES S·M·L
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HOURS: Monday thru Saturdy 9:30 til 5:00
Yhunday ':30 til 12 Noon

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e AD[H)N TO YOUR
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.,

............,....

1lr '

II

�Thursday, March 6. 1986

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Report...

Judge O'Brien ends
24 cases Wedriesday
. Twenty-fou r cases were pro. cessed Wednesday by Judge Pa; txick O'Brien in the Meigs Cou nty
Court.
Forfeiting bonds were Kevin
Griggs, Reedsville, $45, posted on a
fic titious plates charge; Robert
Vallandingham, Minford, $!&gt;), assured clear distance; Dahny Buffington, Pomeroy; Thomas Yar: nell, Detroit , Mich., and James
:Culver, Jr., Portsmouth, $!XJ each
·on speeding charges.
Fined were Wesley Smith, Ra·
cine. driving while intoxicated, $J))
and costs, 10 days in jail and six
months license suspension; parkIng on roadway, costs on ly; William
King, Pomeroy, driving while
intoxicated, $250 and costs. three
days in jail. 60 days license
suspl&gt;nsion; failm'!' to control, costs
only; Marvin Tolliver. Long Bot·
tom. dri\·ing while intoxicated, $J))
and costs, 10 days in jail. 1~ ays
license suspension; no operator's
licenst'. $!XJ and costs. 10 days in
jail; illegal parking. costs only:
Russell Cremeans. Coolville, driving while intoxicated , $300 and
costs. 30 days in jail and six month
license suspension: driving undN
~uspens io n, ll days in jail and
costs; left of center, costs only ;
expired license plates . costs on ly:
fleeing an ctficer, $35 nd costs; John
Miller. Racine, driv ing whils intoxicated, $lXI and costs. 10 days in )ail
and 120 day license suspension;
driving under suspension 10 days in
jail and costs; left of center, costs

ooly; disorderly conduct. $~ and
costs; Yhirley Yates. Middleport,
driving while intoxicated, $250 and
costs. three days in jail and 60 day
lice nse

suspt'nsio n;

fictitious

plates. costs only : resisting arrest.
10 days in jail and costs: John
Tiemeyer, Middleport, no mumer,
S5 and costs; Harry R. Butcher,
Pomeroy, driving while intoxicaled, $2'i0 and costs, three days in
jail, 10 ay license suspensio n;
failure to control . costs only;
Stsphen Sheridan, Gmveport, !allure to control. $J'i and costs: Anne
Gilbert, Dexter, fail ur~ to control.
$3&gt; and costs; Trrry King. Middleport. failure to Ji('('ns~ dogs, $10 and
costs: William Colliny. Pomeroy.
disorderly cond uct. 30 days in jail.
coyts, two yea rs probation and
suspension of 25 dahs of the )all
sentence; criminal damaging, ll
days in jail, suspended 25 days,
restitution. two years probation a nd
costs: falstftcation. four mo nths in
jail, suspending all but five days,
two

years prtbalion nd costs:

James Prtddy. Rutland. driving
under suspension, ll days in jail
suspended. one )'ear probatton, $50
and costs.
Fined for spm:l ing were Peter
Frizz. Dewey. Okla .. $28 and costs:
Jeffrey Friend . llt'lpr&lt;', Sl2 and
costs: Norman D. N('('Cc. Middle·
pot1. tl2 &lt;md msts: David Ed
monds. Rutland. S2l and costs:
Brian 'h.oudashelt. Pomeroy, $21
and costs, and Matthew VanVranen, Pomeroy, $10 and costs.

Area deaths
Monna Cottrell
Monna Com" ll. 71. Syracuse,
formerly of Ga Ilia County, died
Wednesda)' at tlle Holzer Medical
Center.
A housewife. Mrs. Cottrell was
born Decemb!'r ~. 1912 in Gi lmer
County. \\' Va .. a daughter of the
late Francis and Myrtlfo Hay hurst
Vannoy. She was a mcmb!'r of th~
Chu rch ci Christ in Christian Union.
Surviving ar£' her husband.
.James Cott r~ll whom she ma tTied
April 22. 19:&gt;4 in Stu mp town. \\' .
Va .: a brother. Harley Vannoy,
Bslpre: I'"' sisters. Alma GodfreY
and Ruby BPnnell, ooth of Bt&gt;lprt•,
and several nieces and nephews.
Brsides her parents, shP was

preceded in death by a brother and
a sister.
Services will be held at I p.m
Saturday al the Ewing Funeral
Home with Re\' . Glen McMillen
ctficiating . Burial will be in Crawl
Hill Cemetery . Frieds may call at
the fu tl"ra I homr from 2to ~and 7 to
9 p.m. Friday.

Wilmer W. Black
Wilmer \\' . Black. 69, Yellow
Bush Road. Rout~ ~ - Ractn('. died
Wednesday at his home
A retired carpenter. Mr Black
was oom at Shennan. \\' . \·a .. on
Julv 7, !916. a son of the late .lam&lt;'S
and Floren c~ rumm~rfield Black.
H~ is sutYin'CI !)\· his wife.
Muxin£' Grimm Black; two son!'.
Paul Black of R;icinP. and Dclbrrt
Rlack of Columbus: a da ug hter.
Mrs. John 1l'harlottrt lJtugle' .

Lewis Harris from Broadwa~· St.. to

Vet f rans Memorial Hospital: Mid·
dleport at7: I~ a.m. took Don Roach
from Hudson St.. to Veterans
Memoii e~l;

PomPro)· at 7:23a.m ..

took Dovle Sa t""nt from Route liS!
to HoJzCr Medical Center: Racine
at 11: 16 a.m .. answered a call for
Wilmer Black on the Yellowbu ' h
Road : Rutland at 12: 12 p.m..
treated Gene VanC'&lt;' oo Depot St .
Rutland at U o p.m.. look Walter
King from King Ridge Road to
Veterans Memorial: Pomeroy at
2:08 p.m., treated Gene VanCf' at
the sheriff's qu arters. and at R:.1.1
p.m .. Racine took Lori Gtbson from
ttl' fire station to Vetera ns
Memonal.

from a pointlil,OOJ from the comet's
core to within 6,(0) miles_
Racing through the head of the
comet at 48 miles per second, the
space probr began encountering
increasing amounts of particles
that could have foUed Its mission.
But scientistsa t the oontrol room,
and televisio n viewers across the
nation and in the United States,
watched as the Vega-1 reached its
nearest point to t!J:&gt; core with its
instruments still working.
With the room fuU of excited
scientists, Burton Edelson, Associate Administrator of t!J:&gt; National
Aeronau tics and ~ace Administration stood up and told his Soviet
colleagues, "It gives me great
pleasur'!' to congratulate you with
this great success." At one point,
scient ists feared they would not

J.

receive the

Hallf'\''s mmrt h;:~ nPvrr be(:&gt;n
""n. · clrspi t~ the com(•t's 28 ptl'\' ioUS

Jrope!'

recorded pas= around the

sun .

Aft er sLx ;·cars of planrung, the
\'ega I mission came dowr to a
tl'nsc 30-minute dash that took it

guidance information obtained by
the Russian Vegas, will soon be
directed to fly as close as llO miles
from the nucleus of HaUey's comet.
Halley's comet, visible from
Earth every 76 yeat~ . was Ia" seen
in 1910. It will not return tot!J:&gt; inner
so lar sys t~m again until :Il61.
The romet will come within 39
million miles of Earth Aprilll. Its
closest approach to Eart h, and Its
most spectacular IU'orded appearance. occutTed in 8J7 A.D. when
Halley's comet passed ooly 3. 1
million miles away.
Ray Newburn. a leader of tllc
International Hallpy \\'atch. said
this appearance will be the "worst
viewing for t!J:&gt; naked eye in ill:• last
2,!00 years."

transmissions.

"The encounter was a bit later
act ually than k was fores!l'n and
we were worried whether-the right
imagE'-taping SL'Q uence had actu·
ally started ... We were not sure the
right Image-taping sequence would
sla rt at the proper time lbutl
actually it did," Sov iet astronomer
Karoly Szcgo told ABC News
Nightli ne in a live interview from
the Soviet Space Institut e.
The Vega-1. in add it i:&gt;n to providing photographs, alsoca nied equ ipment to gather data on the comet's
temperature and composit ion.
It used a special three· channel
television spectrometer to analyze
the comet' s chemical composition
and an infrared spertromet er to
measure sur1ace lernperaturrs of
th~ nucleus.
NASA designed the apparatus
used by the VPga·l to examine an d
analyze the dust particles.
A twin backup spacec raft \'ega-2- was to arrive• at the scene
in a few days to provide mon•data.
Seientists have !'Stimated that it
~· ilt takeaoout a yeartoanalyze the
results of the Vega missions.
A EuroJl('a n Space Agency probe
dubbed Giotto, relying in part on

Meigs s&lt;'hools get

Counr~ ·

grncy Ml'di cal Srr\'ices reports.
At 3: ~9 a.m . Middleport took

Soviet spaceship penetrates
core; gives Earth first view
of Halley's celestial mystery

MOSCOW 1UPII - The Soviet
spaceship Vega-l fulfilled its destiny today, penetrating Halley's
West Sa lem; three brothers. RI· Comet to give Earth Its first view
chard, Portland: Paul of Louiston, into the core of a celestial mystery
Idaho, and Francis Black, East that has puzzled skygazers for
Liverpool; two sl.rers, Anna Lem - millenia.
ley. Portland, and Rulh Taylor.
After initial debate about what
Racine . and sLx grandc hildren .
thPy wf'n' set•ing, Soviet and
Besides his par~nts. h~ was American scientists burst into
preceded in death by a brother and applause as the comet's nevertwo sisters.
beforE'-seen nucleus- estimated to
Services will be held at 2:30p.m. be only 2 to 2.5 miles across- burst
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral onto television screens in the
Home with Rev. Steve Dean'r cont rol room of the Soviet Space
officiating. Burial wiU be in Letart lnslitute.
Falls Cemelery . Friends may call
"It is a day of science history.
at the funeral home from 2to4and 7 !\ever befol"f' han' we seen a comet
to 9 p.m. Friday.
close up:· said Fred Whipple.
Oli!(tna lor of the Amen lheof)'
descri bing comets as "dirty
Naomi Pirkt&gt;ns
snowballs."
Whippl&lt;&gt;'s widely accep•ro 3:&gt;Naomi J . P\ckms, 00, Athens ,
formerl y of Reedsville. died Thurs- year-old theory holds that comets
da)· morning at O'Bicness Memor- ""' mostly in• and frozen gases
such as met hane, carbon dioxide,
tal Hospital in Athens
She was a dau ght~r of the la te carbon monoxide and ammonia
Frank and Frankie Pickens and mLxed with bit s of rock - Jert fmm
was a membrr of 1hr l.ong Ronom the same cloud of gas and dust from
which Earth, the sun and othe r
Christian Church .
SUI'\'i\·ing are a bmther. Charles pianets fmmed .
Scient ist s got several glimpses of
Pickens. WiUiamstO\\Tl. W. \ 'a ..
the
co m~t' s nucleus toda y.
and a sister. Wanda Meredith.
The
co lor -enhanced computer
WeSPI'\'ille. Besides her parrnts sh~
rmages
r('('('i,·ed
at about 10:30a.m .
was prl'l'(&gt;ded in death by two
from
the
probe's
closest point to the
bmthers. Grant and George, and a
nucleus
showed
a jagg(&gt;d-edged,
sistPr, Margarrt Brov.11 .
~gg - shap&lt;'d mass with a yellow
Sel'\'ices will lx• held at 1 p.m.
Saturda; al the White Funeral rrn1rr SUITounded by a hard bluC'
Home in Coon·i11c with Rev . Roy and thr n a lighter purple halo .
Though tra\'cling at the sl'ff'd of
Deeter officia ting. Burial will be in
light.
thr lmagr - an unprec~ ­
Reeds,·i11e C~m~t cry . Friends rna\
call at th~ funeral home from 2 to~ denled virw of th~ object that has
fasdnal&lt;'d p&lt;'Op iP al lmst as far
anrl 7 to !1 p.m . on F'rida~ .
back as :110 B.C. - was gr , min ut!'S
old b\ tlw time it rm('hed Earth.
more than 100 million mill'S away .
L:ntil today. the nucleus of

Emergency squads foundation
answer eight calLs
Eigh t caJJ..;; wrrr tmswrrrd \\'c'tl
payments
nf'sday. thf' !\1 rigs
Fmt'r

IIOiar sy!tem. Another lnstnunenlln their expaimtlnt
will analyl.e processes tbal produce the long,
spectarolar tall\i of oomets. i\ lall of mlllloll!i ol miles
In length Is the nwt stunning aspe&lt;Jt of comets, as
shown In t1t1s 1910 photo of Comet Halley lbal was
computertlzed to ench1111ce using rmdem tedmlques.
UP!.

RACES TOWARD RENDEZVOUS - As Eu,ean
spacecraft Gfollo races toward Its rmdeiMlUll wllh
th~ k'Y rore of Halley's Cornet, an on-hoard
experiment conceived at the University of California
in Berkeley 1111d developed jointly with both Frmch
1111d Gennan scletttisls wllh sample KBSei combtg off
the '"met to learn about earliest composition of the

Veterans Memorial
Admitted .. Don Roach, Middlepot1; Beth Stivers, Middleport ;
James Smith, Ltngsvil le; Yvonne
Walk~r . Shade.
Discharged--Sa llie Byers, C h~ryl
Ferguson, Don Roach.

(Continued from page 1)
Finally, the AIUa.itce formally
endorsed the Child Assault Prevention Project, headed locally by Ms.
Teresa Tucker. and urged the
eommission to support the project.
The .•'\lliance feels the project
"complbnents efforts" made by the
local Children's ServiCes concerning "actual prevention" of child
abuse and neglect.
Comments and suggestions from
the county commission regarding
the report are being welcomed by
the Alliance.
Commissioner Richard Jones
called the report "constructive"
and Instructed that a copy be
forwarded to Michael Swisher,
director of the Meigs County
Department of Human Services.
The commission intends to schedule a meeting, possibly next
Wednesday, with Judge Robert
Buck of the juvenile rourt, to
discuss updating the local WeHare
Advisory Board. Following the
meeting, a formal letter will be sent
to the Alliance in answer to the
report.

Hearing
underway
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (UP! )
- Hearings for a West VIrginia
University football player. a former
player from Cleveland and an
employee of a downtown bar
charged with assault following a
Oet'emb!'r bar brawl began today
in magistrate rourt.
Sophomor'!' defensive back Andrew Jones of Fort Lauderdale,
Fla.. fanner defensive back Anthony Daniels and John Rose of
Uniontown. Pa., a oouncerat Eric's
Lounge. wer'!' scheduled to go
befor'!' Mononga lia County Magistrate Alan Wheeler beginning at 9
a.m. The hearings were expected to
last until mid-afternoon, a spokeswoman said.

March 6, 1986

ARROW SHIRTS
FOR

William M. Long to Shirley M.
Long, Lot 640, Lebanon.
Shirley M. Long to Eugene V.
Long, Lot 640, Lebanon.
Vytlce M. Sellers, Janice K.
Russell Marttn, Robert Martin to
George E. Sellers, Vyttce M.
Sellers, parcels, Olive.
James Gheen, Angela Gheen to
James Gheen, lot 424, Mldd. VIII.
Paul L. Nutter to Clarence W.

Before We Crttlcl:re
\\'hm we view thE&gt; mls!ake'l of others.

And our own we cannot see:.
It \\oold br wtse to stop and thlnk.
Cou ld ttee be made by mE'?
Cook! I by chance IX' gullty
And condemn the things t~ do''
When J m yself. have did th(' sa me.
And I kno"': W(' aU have too.
So let \6 stop and check ourselves.
Try m Cf' to t a k ~ I helr pi act' .
Maybe' the guut W(' S('(' In tllf.'m ,
They 9eE' upon 'OU r face.
Consider Nerytlling !hats doll£'.

The reasoo must be there.
So It wt&gt; Judge and rrttl&lt;'lze.
Remember, do II fair.

Do, as \\'l' would havt&gt; them do,
The Golden Rulf&gt;ot..v.
WI" ca nnot au ll' peri('(' I.
Bu1 do beltE'f lWI'Y day.
A nd lt sorJE future t lJm:&gt; yw !«'.
Sorn&gt; deed, that don't look ~­
You may rind thf&gt; roo! answrr.
If thr problem Is Wlderstood.

By OIPn

IN LONG &amp; IHORT ILEEVE

FLORIST

BAHR
CLOTHIERS
Ml DDlEPOAT

l\1 eiiC~

Cou nty ".t Old.?.t F'lori.Jt

352 usr MAll
I'OMIIOT, 01110 457 . .
6141992·2644

ThC' leaders that hf&gt;lp run 11 .
11w people pulthfm 1herE'.
Som:'!iiTif.&gt;S we could 00 bf&gt;!lN,
But lets shw.• them, tha t Wt' can"
L('ts gel behind and hrlp them,
And stop the bell y-aches .
They'n.&gt; human. sam(' as w,;• aJV,
And subject to mistakes.

Harrison

But vou ha\'t' a ehanCP to r hangr II.
Colli?. £&gt;1oction timf' t'arh fall.

School Foundation subsidit \ paY·
ments. according to a report by
State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson.
In all of Oh to. the su bsid)'
p ay m r n ts amoun!Pd to
$145,:\96, 109.3.1.
Amoun ts tl'Cei\'ed b\ each of the
dist riel s aft C'r deduct ions for rrt Ln~·

mpnt

p a~· mcnt s

thlnk

Yes, tha nks to our Saviour
OJr Father In ~avC'n ...
Miraeles st ill happm tOOa y.

~ Free

PH.

1411,

GOLD FILLED,
STERLING MANY STYLES

E\'Prylhln~

will lr alri~ht
If we foii&lt;M' and walk
lfl ~ slig h t ...
Don't doubt ttx• Lord
AbldC' In tis 'AWd.
Mira clE'S still happen tcxt,'\.V .

BOGGS

Relll('m ber that blind man
Th&lt;l t J t'Sus did ht'al
And l1f' told him In ,go on his
They asked hlm who hl:'alro him. ..
He sa id, ",I&lt;'Sus of Na1.art't h""
Mlracll'S !:illll happen tuday .

wa~·

11"1('ff' Yo"f'Tt' so mllny miracles.
OJr God did j;!"lv('

Miraclf'S still happen tOOay .
If wr tx&gt;llevr In Ctis t JPSus
and prBy
Stranl!{' things do hapPf'n .

NOW

OFF

of employe'S wprf'

lastrrn Local, Slll,100.17: Meigs
Local. $28.1.246.96. and Southern
Local. $115,857.(R In addition, til:•
Meigs County Board of Educa tion

BULOVA, SEIKO

receivrd a dirN't allotmPnt of
$;8,701.68.

PULSAR

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PH. 742-2050

ll -28-3 mo .

NEW SELECDON

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FOR ALL YOUR
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992-5875 Or
742-3195

In Memoriam

IN MEMORIAN
In loving memory
of Hobert Day who
passed away two
years ago today,
March 6, 1984.
Gone but not

HARTLEY SHOES
992-5272

YES, WE NEED HELP
Due to inrease in Sales in recent
weeks We Will Hire and Train Several
New People ...

•Strong Dalira For Success
•Hard work

rAtk~vff-r~/

210 EAST MAIN

HELP

POMEROY

No experience Required or Desired. We
will Train you. No Sex Discrimination,
we are an Equal Opportunity Employer.
If you feel you Measure up to these
·standards and Possess a Desire to work
with a Winning Team, Send Resume·to
Box lll, Pomeroy, Ohio.

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. t 24,Pomeroy Ohio

3-24 -ttc

ALL

PlUMBING &amp; HEA nNG

VINYL &amp; AWM1NUM

Middleport, Oh1o 41760
·sALES &amp; SERVICE

20 years
" Free Estimates "

New location:
I U North Se&lt;Ond

W8 C11rry Fishing Supplitts

Pay Your Cable &amp;
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BUSINESS PHONE

16141 992-6110
REIIOENCE PHONE
16141 992-7114

&lt;AU COllECT:

Ph. (6141 843·5425

1-12-2 mo .

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&amp;

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PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

St.,

992·3345J/2/lln

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Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
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Mill

211

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3/11 / lfn

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NOW SERVING THE

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St. Rt. 160 North

Call:
11 -14-tfc

SCIPIO ENER Y
RECYCLING
Now Pavl111 25&lt; II.
For ltatt.-1
aiUiftlnunt caM.
Mutt bt &lt;Ompltttly Ito,
lll ather types of aluminum
purcho1td .. ily.

Open 8 a.m . til 6 p.m.
weekdays
8 to 12 Saturday
Located 11/t Milts
East of Pagetown
Ph. 992·1~~lt mo

•Aefrigeretors

•Dryers •Freezers

Gtlllpolls, Ohio

PARTS end SERVICE

3-3-' 86 -1 mo .

VIDEO
SERVICE
BOB DANIELS

742-2552
2-17-86 -t mo
GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashon Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
9-30-t!

119.95
Turn left at Meigs Memory
Gardena. 3 m ile oft Rl. 7 on

the right

47159 Eagle Ridge Rd .

1-ll ttn

•Strong Desire for Success
•Hard Work

All replies held in the strictest of
confidence. Send resemes to:
Ofo The Daily Sentinel

P.O. lox 729L
Pomeroy, Ohio

DOZER , BACKHOE.
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER ,
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES.
RECLAMATION, PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; OIRT
JIM CLIFFORD

PH . 992-7201 -) -

SMAll JOIS

PtUMiiljG - PAHIUNG
CEILING TU
UTiliTY IUilDINGS IUILT
ON SITE

LUIY &lt;Ptatl CARNAHAN
U 171 Oo• Hill U .

Lona lottom, OH. 4S7U
985-4112 or 985· 3301

1-31 -16-1 mo.

nNE TillER ON HOlD
NOW THRU MAY I
A! lOW AS I I00 DOWN
GRAVELY
TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor !,,, Pomeroy

992-2975
2· 14-l mo.

12·8-llc

f£

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

-~ LISA M.
~

KOCH,

M.S.

W. E. ( I) SNOUFFER
FEDERAL-STATE

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

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

INCOME TAX RETURNS
St., Pomeroy, -Oh.

107 Sycamore

PHONE 992·7075
HOUR S: 9:00 A.M.-5:00PM . Mon . •hru Sat.
Evenings 81 Sunday By Appointment

1-15-tln

B-13 tfn

4/ 1/ tfn

YOU PROVIDE

HAND &amp; CIR . SAWS
CARBIDE TIPS
SCISSORS - MOWER
BLADES

PUT YOUR SNAPPER REAR

CHESTER- 985·3307

•Major Medical Program
•Company Car
•Security

CONTRACTING

YOUNG Ill
992· 6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

RIDENOUR
&amp; APPLIANCE

•Good Salary

PEAT'S SHARPEN UP

6/rtn

V. C.

.....,

WE OFFER:

HILL FORD

J&amp;F

3/ 1/

(Free Estimates)

Wt Hn1 Ahll Tl ..
Sh, Tt•••lclu

Progressive G.M. Dealership seeking
the righl penon to handle and manage accounting duties for dealership.

SER~ICE
We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
1epair Gas Tanks.
PAT
992· 2196
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

work

.

OFFICE MGR./
COMPTROLLER

RADIATOR

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

- Add ona and remodeling
- Roo fing and gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and etecuicat

•SPEED QUliN lAUNDRY
oGIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATElliTE SAlES &amp; SlRVICE

TV

(Pans includ«&lt;)

Oil Chango. Sharpen Blades

" FREE ESTIMATES"

CARPENTER
SERVICE

WE ARE YOUR SALES
ANO SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

PUSH MOWER TUNEUP

•New Roofing

YOUNG'S

10-8-tfc

•SYmNIA

····2'"

/wlloildllg Of/11

l/11 /tln

4-5-Ift

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

lur "

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•R ep laceme nt W indows

S-POINTS AREA
For Service Call

RENT A CAR
CALL

•Ranges

46770 . Caoe No . 24,983 .
You are hereby notified
that the Inventory and Ap·

YOU PROVIDE:

~TURALIZER

Racin•, Oh.
614·843·5191

992-3194

•Washer• •Di1hwashers

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

•Executive Sales Position
•Monthly Bonus Program
•Major Medical Insurance
•Demonstrator 8t Gasoline
•Comprehensive Training
•Management Opportunity
•Security

;

Ph.

BUILDINGS

Home 143·5340

All M1ku

ceased, late of 11id County,
were flied in this Court . Said
Inventory and App raiaement
will be for hearing before
this Cour1 on the 18th dey

Meiga County
Court of Common Pteaa
of March. 1986 , a• 1:30
Pro bite 0 jy t.io n
o'clock P . M . .
To the Executor or Admin Anv person desiring to file 1L.----.IOIO;.I.IIIIIt.tl~
ittrator of the estate, to such exceptions thereto must file
of the folk)wing •• are resi - them at least five days prior
dents of the State of Ohto, to the dale set for hearing
viz:-the .. rvivi"lg spouse,
Given under my hand and
the next of kin. the benefici- nal of said Court, this 25th
aries under the will: and to doy of February, 1986 .
Robert E. Buck , Judgo
the anorney or anornev• re presenting 1ny of the afore-, Bv Lena K. Ne11elroad , Clertc
(2127; 131 8, 21c
mentioned persons:
How1rd S . Ebersbtch. de -

2

El.ctrician ]

DON IOSI, Owner

985-3561
NOTICE ON FILING OF
INVENTORY ANO
APPRAtS EM ENT
The S•ote of Ohio

P&amp;S

2-20-1 mo.

CLRSSIFIED RDS
Public Notice

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

PlUS: Offiu Supplits &amp;
furniture, Wedding
and Graduation
Stationery, Magnetic
Signs, Rubber Stamps,
Businns Forms,
Copy Services, Etc.

No Sunday Calls

Mrs. Barbara Ja mes

Or

Read the Best Seller
Read the

POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12xl6'

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP
F11 All Yw P1lwtlws N11h

Mlrarles arE' here ro stay.

The Daily Sentinel

WE OFFER:

FINE SSE

WOODEN

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

Far111 Eqalpment

God;s thE' sam(' yf'StPrda y
And toclay.
MiraciPS arr ttv&gt;rf' for thr asking.
Hr's ours for the graspi ng.

STEEL &amp;

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

EUGENE LONG

SALES &amp;SERVICE
U. S_RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE . OH 10

'1-f- ~~1
I
i/

0

20 1/1'o

949-2649

2·20-tfn

NEW SELECTION

PIERCED EARRINGS

Estimatesl

\1/h('l'e his txxly did IllY ..
Miracles still happcon tcday.

'"Miracle&gt;' '

ThC' ~vern ~ n t. Its st! U the sa me.
No Kings, no Queeru;, no Czars.
And ttlf sta ll'S th at marK Its IXlundarlrs.
Makes wr !lag of many stars.

CONTRACTING
Complete Building
and
Contrading Service

From t he grave.

co~are.

2-13-1 mo .

AU

To him a lK'\1' life hC' gave ..
Cbmr forth Lazarus
He did arlsr rrom the ron'.

Bul can 't find om• that looks a.s good.

Or any way

INC.

CIRCLE

"VINYl SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION
BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

COUNTY
APPLIANCE,
446-1699

M ake !t knm·n to t'Vt&gt;Jyune.
Show the Ofl('S you do not \Ike,
That you're a F;onna run

1'n' be a credit to voor tCM'n.
YOur state and coUntry too
Stand up proudly and givr salut('.
To thr red. lh£' whit£'. lhf' blu{'.

Repairs
OPEN 8 TO 6

62 7 llrird Au., Gallipolis

If yw thin k you could do bt'Tter.

wonclf'r If vou rould do as good,
H thC'y would haw pu r you tu tJw tes t.
B~· 0\('n Har rison

You can takf' a !lip around It,

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.
long Bottom, Ohio

But

Vts\1 eo1.mtr1es (&gt;V('rywhere.

ROOFING

TV, Washer, Dryer
and Refrigerator

2-tl-86-tfn

J£&gt;Sus railed Lazarus out

You may grtpr somrtlrrl'S, and stat(' your
pi«&lt;.
Right ak:lng with a lltlv&gt; rrst.

And Its run thE&gt; same loda y.

}' OU

Howard L WriteMI

949-2263
or 949·2969

lhfrf&gt;'s not way,

Sadly missed by wile,
Retha; grandchildren
&amp; grandchilren.

as thf'ir shJ rr oft hr Frbrua r~ Staff'

Look l or a m.i.racle.
It l'Ollld happen to yoo .
When you'rt&gt; duwn, and

Th(' party thry belong to,
May rDt suit us. one and all .

forgotten .
'Jltr thrrf.' local SC'hool districts of
:'vlr tgs Coonr, rf'C ri,·ed S5 J O. ~&gt;()J.2 1

Gallla County Rural Water As soc. Inc., Right of Way, Ease,
Salisbury.
Richard W. Stuhr, Ctnda Carolyn Stuhr, to Beverly K.
Thompson, par cels, Salem.
Eltzabeth Riebel Dec ., to
Roger Riebel, A!Cid., Chester.
Alfred Young, Lyvonnla Young
to B.J .R. Enterprises. Rl&amp;ht of
Way, Salisbury.

Thf're'.s oo expla natkm.
Thf' bUnd 00 see,
And m any are healed ...
E\l{'flthe sick where thry lay ..
Miracles art&gt; here to s t a~·

And 1r 1hey don't elect ~-ou .
You'll know that you Yo'l'fl' wrong
But tFlp the onf.'S that bt&gt;at you,
At lrast, It ca n'llX' long .

Never Sa1lolfted
Thf' rou nt N !hal IIIVf' ln.
111(' good oid U.S.A.
Was tou ndro by good propll:',

land 'Road, Pon11nd, Ohio

AND SUMMER
FOR MEN

Ba ker, Rita A. Baker, par cel,
Oltve .
Nancy J . Larkins to Rubal W.
Caldwell, parcels, Oltve.
Jessie M. Weber, Dec., by
Executr ixes, to Rodney L.
Kelter, parcels, Chester.
Jessie M. Weber, Dec., to Nora
R. Eason, by executrixes, par cels , Chesler.
Ralph Cundiff , Lois Cundiff to

Meigs County poet's corner

cooood, 64297 New Port-

SPRING

Business Services

Meigs COunty property transfers

Pre-trial confcl'!'nces, motions
and instructions to the jury werr
experted to take up rrost rttb?day ,
Wheeler said. The trial , Involving
all three tried together, may be split
into separate tlials because one
defendant - not identified -does
not want to be tried as a group. he
said.
The three are charged with
misdemeanor assault . Three crher
WVU players - junior running
back John Holifield of Romulus,
Mich., freshman wide receiver
Keith Wlnn of Dayton and fresh ·
man running back Craig Taylor of
Linden. N.J. - a re accused of
felonious assault in the same
Incident .
Their cases have been bound over
to a county grand jury but no action
has yet been taken.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-J3

Ohio

~-~

,

.

i

BISSHL SIDING COMPANY
OnEIS

Sprl11g &amp; S•111111et S~eel1ls

TRIPLE PANI THERMAL IAMIII DELUXE TILl ,l'~ \ SASH, EASY CLEAN REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
-, __;:;:o&gt; $349Includos (ompltlt lnstollation
•FREE Vinyl Siding E.-£imatel
•New Homas Built

I

110 'I• We1t Main Street, Pomeroy

Phone 614.992-6771

Your Complete Auto lc,dy ll:. pr:m C• nler
Body ~ill er1 . Sondpopen . f'ol11h lna Compound • Poon ll
Ur•thone Hordn•" · (Sold Und., Whol"o l• Ta All)

Ound" New R~lacement Ports For Trudu And Co"
(Sat i 1f~ion

!FHA-VA·HUOJ

guo ront l'.d)

•Blown In Insulation
•A Profetsionallocal

Contractor

•15 Yro. of Locot Service
PM. 949·210 I or 949·2860 Day or IIIah!
110
CAlLS
1·6·tfn

••u

TOWN I COUNTRY
VITEIINAIIAN
CUNIC
Paul E. Shodtey, DVM
PT. PUASAIIT OFFICI
305 Jaciiion a...

suu ••u Ho•s

Mta.-Wtd.-Thvrs. l·S pm
Tutl. 6,30·1; Fri. 1·2 pm
Satur•r 10·11 :30 am
LAIGI . . .Al&amp;
SIIGIIT IT APPl.

PH. 304·675-2441
BEND AIEA CALL
Ripley Office
Far tlours
304-372·5

0

l "o'T£HTH£PM

INTERTHERM &amp; COLEMAN

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING
#1 tine of mobile home
By offering a complete

** **

heating end cooling products for the tri -

county area.
"FURNACES
'HEAT PUMPS
"AIR CONOtTIONEAS
"COMPLETE LINE OF REPLACEMENT PARTS
'FACTORY AUTHORIZED &amp; TRAIIIIEO
SERVICE CENnA
FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR . EMERGENCY SERVICE

CAlL (6141 446·,416

Announcem en Is
3 Announcements
SWEEPER and uwhg machine :
repair, parts. •nd supplla. Picll
up end delivery, Oa\lll Vecuum

Cluner , ont half milt uJi

George~ Creel Rd . Cell 114·
446 -0294 .
•

Prtgnan cy letting; Birth cantrot ·
"rvlces. YO tnting ; contk1tn-:

till; lliding fe&amp; .cele; Pl•ned ...
Parenthood of S.E.O.. for appt ...
Call 614 -446 -0UI or 114· 992 -5912 .
ladot wester11 aquare d.-.c.r,nead t dance panner. lnterMted.'
contect

P .O.

Bo11.

340,

Rio..

Grande. Oh. 458n.
R1cln e Gun Shoot epon10red

•

II? ~

Racine Gun Club . EvffY Sundew, ...

btginnlng at 1 ·00 p.m. hotory :
Choke 12

--,

guageshotgunt.

�Page-14-The Daily Sentinel
3

LAFF-A-DAY

Announcements

NHd I flitnd1 Adopt I kitten or
cttl Call thl MMga County
Hun\ene Soclfty. Call IJ14 -9920.05.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1- 2 bdr .• 1- 3 bdr. BothatK.tn
comptetely fumlahed. Call 814-

441· 9019.

2 bdr. locet.cl in Evergreen

If per10n who tit 1918 Maroom

childr... .captld. Call· 81.4-

Oldsmobile In FoodiiWid ~rking
lot will Clll no chwgea will bl
pr ...... 304· 175-1090.

4

448-3197

Of

814-245-5223.

12:•70 2 bdr. mobila home,
woodburner, 3 mi . out BulwiUt
Rd . Call 814-441 -9204.

Giveaway

3 bldroom 12•70 e•ptndo
tivingroom. 314 3rd. St.. Kt·
ntugt. Ctll 614-446-7473.

To good home . Mtdkun aire,
wt'litt long haired dog. Haa been

IPaved . Very gentle. Call 814 992 -2143 or after 5:00 Call
014-!192-1373 .

1 2dll two b«&lt;room trail•.
Loc.ttd on Roush Ltnt. Che·
lhlre, Ohio. Ctlt 304-n3-6828.

PIANO T1JNING AND REPAIR ,
redilcov• your pieno'a beattiful
tone. ctll todey. Wardl Keybo~rd. 304-676 -5600 Of 8763824.

Trttlor for rent 1185. month
1100 depolit . Loctttd 651
BelCh St. Middlepon . Call614·
992· 23&amp;0.

2 bedroom mobile home. 30th
StJeet.. uU ' " " 4 :00. 304·675·
15U .

Mtle rabbit dog, 9 months old,

30•· 076· 2&amp;27 . ,

6

Lost and Found

FOUND Artielllt belonging to
Square
in lilver
Bridge Dancer,
Shoppingfound
Plan.
Call
014 317 7188
'
'
'
FOUND. Koys: off c..,rt St ,_
""
City Perking tot . Can be pidted
up at Gallipolis Oaily Tribune
Offlc. • 8 2 •0 Th "· d A ve . ,
Gtllipolis
·
LOST apoked hub ctp between
Pomeroy and Radne Saturday.
If foukl Ct11614· 992 -5919
Loat-Femala Blue Healer. lost
Feb. 25 in Keno arN . If found
Ctll614 ·949· 2083.
LOST bled1 female Doberman.
wnring green collar. vicinity at
Union Road , New Haven ,
answers to " Pepper". contact
Coonie Roulh . lO.t-882-2896
UW~tlfd .

LOST male Beagle. Ct1arl_.
Zuapan Farm. Po«ers Creek
RoM! , wtaring red collar, call
30.t-&amp;75· 8872

"I was a Republican
BEFORE it became fashionable."
·

1;;;:::;;;:;:::;:::===1:::::;::==:::::::::=1
12

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Wented : complete l'loulehokf of

good uHd fumit\lre 1nd l'louu·
hold ilems. Phone 304-438
7490, Mndows Aucbon

9

m~n

Of

woman in privtte ho1111 . 24
houn care. C.ll &amp;1 4 -992· 7663.

Schools
Instruction

Wanted to

Do

Will do hous.c:Maning . Can
614 ·. . 8· 11816 .
sn.rpening ....... tlend. band
and circular SIWS. Kaith Shirhry,
304·8915· 3600.

WANTED TO BUY ultd wood &amp;
coal heaters . SWAIN 'S FURNI·
lURE . 3rd S. Qt;ve St Gall..,o·
lis . Call 614 -446 -3169 .
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and ntM~er us«t cats. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 E11tem
Aw .. Gallipolis. Call 6U - 446·
2282.
Used Mobile Homes . 614 - 4-t6·

0175

Buying daily gold , silver coins,
rings, jewelry. st.-ling were, old
coins. e.tgl cunency. 1 op pri·
cea. Ed. Burken Barber Shop.
2nd Ave. Middleport, Oh. 614 ·
992 &lt;W76 .
Wanted old pianos. Paying
UO .OO and *40 .00 each . Fir1t
Roor only . Write giving direc ·
tiona . Winen Pienos Bok 188
Sardia. Ohio 43946 Call 614 483 -1806.

Finanml
21

11

Help Wanted

Talephone work 1n their home
Must M 1 B years old. Call
614 -446 ·7479
A\ION Call for informatfo n
about s~ling Avon pro duc11.
eam up to 50% profit. Cell
614 · 448 -2158
Immediate operungt· stle~peo ·
pte wanted for an ucitin; end
~ardirtg career at Deer1and
Ruort . if you are an enthuai utic
~ton that would like to write
your OW'n paycheck. call Glan or
larry at 114-28&amp;· 2248 betWMn
,1AM and 2 :00PM Excellent
working conditions with el5 ·dav
work week · Monday 1nd Tuts·
days off . PaMi training lntar·
viewing Thursday and Fridav
only .
Executive S.cre1 eritl Positton
Aveillb!e. Requirements: Word
l)locessing skills. co"1)u ter dlta
arnrv lkperience, typing filing.
f•t Ieamer. terrifi c telephon•
caplb~it iea . Sala~ : commentu·
rete to "''litlcatkms 1n.d np•
rienoe . Schadule: Negatiabl•
Must po11111 abilitv to deal with
condidential material and work
with the public. Pleua forw11d
all r•umn to : Box T202. in care
of the Gtllfpolis Daily Tribune ,
825 Third Ave .. Gtll ipotis, Oh
45&amp;31 .
Euy At~embtv Wortlt 1800 .00
per 100 . GuarantNd Peym..,t.
No Exper;.nce· No Set•. Details
send self· addrllt.ci stemped
envelope: Elan Vital ·6847 3418
En11111rile Rd .. Ft. Pierca, Fl
33.82 .
EtiY Auembty Wortll 1800.00
per 100. Guar1ntMd Payment
No hperience· No Sal•. Details
aend Jelf· lddrnHd stamped
tnvelopt: Elllfl Vital -715 3418
Entarprill Rd . Ft Pierce, Fl
33482
Govemmtnt Jobe. 118 ,040
U9 .230 · yr . Now Hiring . Call
806-887· 8000 Ext. R-98015 for
curr.,t tedtralllst.
En• Aa..mbty Wo,.l teOO.OO
I * 100. GuerentHd peymenl

No a11perlence· no Nlee . Dettlls
Mnd aelf-lddr•Md ftamped
envelopa: Elan Vitat -5847 3418
Entarprl" Rd . Ft . Pitn:t, Fl
33482.
RN' a needed . Full tima-Ptrt
t iiM, CO,.etitl\le IIIII'Y, IIIC.. ·
lent ban.rH pttChge. Ndr.marn
program. Equal Oppor1unhy
Employer. Arctdle NuraJng Cen·
••· Coolville, Olllo. 114· M7·
3111.
To . . Awon n any INt. Ctll
304· 117&amp;-1429 .
Four cp.n lng II .,..ra of 111• or
dder. W. Vt . realdant1. ZO houn
t WMil. doing oonwnunitv won..
Umitld lnCIOrM Wo~ld• lhl•.
ContiiCI Point PINaant Job
S..-vk:e, 1111th auttt. Pomt
Pl....,t, w. v•.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOillE HOME SALES. 4 Ml
WEST, GALLIIIOLIS , AT 36
PHONE 114· 441· 7274 .
1973 Ntw Moon 12JI86. 2bdr ..
woodbum•. ceiling tan, air
cond., porch 6 und&amp;rpinning
Ctlt IU -251· 9381 .
1983 Happy Heuta 14JI!IS, total
electric, 2.&amp; outlide walls. AC .
undefptnned. 8k12 root over
patio. other tatra 'a. For lnformt·
ttm call 814-387 -7316 . At
Pri.,.t Trail.- Park. Addison .
1975 FIMtwood 14x70. total
electric. 3 bdr., 11.-'J baths. nlfllllt
carpe1. w11her · drver . wood ·
burner, renge a ref . C1il 614·
-"6·0175 .

1980 libany 14d4, 2 bed ·
room. unfumished . vinyl under ·
pinning included. Mutt sell. Call
30•· n3 -5873 .

Business
Opportunity

1984 Schultz. 141170. 3 bed·
! NOTICE !
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ·
lNG CO n~commends that you
do buY~•• with people you
know . and NOT to ttnd money
ttlrough the mail until yoo have
inv11tigated the offering.
Grocery Store equipment. dliry
cu•. deli caM, slicer, cuh
ragiat.-s . etc . Call 614 -2ol&amp;·
50152, 9-4, Mon .·Fri
Will pl•ce cig arena machinft .
Good commlntons . Call 304·
n3 -S651
Dlstributort-Sal• People - New
Pltintld !'"Oduct. ample lalda .
aU Ohio, no tr..,tl . Top peopl•
earned U!i .OOOto •so.OOOiast
veer . loll lrM 800· 334·7479
ekt . 106 .
Maplewood Lounge for sale. 7
miles nof1h of Pomt Ple ...nt.
304-676 -22 59

Emp lovmen t

Ser v1ces

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1971 Schuhz 12•&amp;5 2 bdr., new
carpet. 19&amp;3NewMoon10x50,
n.,., Clfllet . BO'Ihlkcelllflt cond
Call 614· 446· 0175 .

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model cl..,
used e11r1.
Jim Mink Cht'I.·Oids Inc.
Bill Gene .Johnson
81 4·"8 · 3072

Homes for Sala

New liding lf't4l windows. close
to swimminw pool and Nof1h
Poiflt Gr8de School. 304-676·
6872 .

32

Truck Drfvet" School: Job plec•
m.,t uli•lence. DOT Cer1ification , Eligibl• lnttitution factaral
aid . guarantl'td .tudtnt kJ.,s,
Home study· rMid~~nt training .
Stan immtdiat.ty. United Trucll
Matw , Min•ll Wtlll, W.Vt.
30•· 489· 2027 home offi~ .
C letrwatet, Fl.

18
8

31

Situations
Wanted

vtcancy ...........
~_.
IUr _..,..,y

15

22

Money to Loan

HOME OWNERS· Aatinan ce ta
low fixed rate . Uae &amp;qurty tor any
purpon leader Mongage Co ,
614 · 592· 306,

Unlimited capntt available fot
.,., bulint~u j11rpou. Call 814·
256· 1712

23

Profeuional
Services

PIANO TUNING ANO REPAI,_ ,
red!.covftf your piano'1be.uttful
tone, call tode'f!. Wards K.y·
board . 304-67! -6600 or 1!17&amp;·
3824
PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR .
rid itoovar your piano·• btautif\.11
tone . cell today. Werda K-v ·
board. 304· 67!5 · 61500 Of 8713824

roon.. 2 fult bttht . Eacellent
condition . 117 .000. Call 1!114·
U9 -259' Of 304-925 -3293.
Howetd Roush property in Ra ·
cica. Ohio. 2411.a one year old
doublawide. All ektctrlc , central
air. nice lot. gerage. out building.
Citv water ~nd sewer. Would
oonstder car er trailer on trade.
Priced on insp~~ttion . 1114-949 2013
Mobil• home oo 14 acra land s·
c_,ed lot Gu h11t . central air,
tpprovecl woodburner, washer .
dryer. stove. rtfrigator . St. At
1.t3. across form Ouckt1t 't
Plant's. Pri ced for quiet: 1111
1 11S,OOO. Call 814 -992 -2792 .
MOBILE HOMES MOVED: in·
aured , reuonlbla flt81. Call
304·578·.2338
MOBILE HOMES MOVED: in·
.urtd, rt..ontble retu. Call
304· &amp;76-2338
1972 Schuh, 12x&amp;O. 2 beef.
root'N, washer &amp; drytr. air
conditioner, cuf1eina. storm
w l ndowa . underpinning ,
1&amp;.500. 304·8715·7122.
1978 Hillcrtet Mobllt Home,
1h70, 304·87!-U18
1973, 141170, 3 bedroom. e•c
oond. und.,...ed , patio IWn·
ing. 12xHI bu;h on room, panty
fumithed. on 1 acre. pt\ont
lOol -!76-2791 or 304-1!175·
2745.
1983 Flirmont mobllt home.
1-h70. ••c. cond. louted on
rentld lot E•tem Ave. Glllipo·
Iii, Ohio. or can bt moved
Financing tvtlllble Peoplas
8tnk. 304·175 -1121

33

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS iEQuol Houolng 0 ••••·
tunity) monthty rent starts at
117&amp; for 1 bedroom and *212
tor 2 bedroom. deposit 1200.
located ne• Sprlftg V.. l.... Plat
"r
andfoodland. pooitndCablaTV
...,ailable, office hours 11 po11i·
blt 10 am to 4 pm tnd 7 pmto 9
pm Mond,y-Frldty, Ctll 614·
446 -2745 or leave mM-IIge.
Nicety furnished mobile home.
apt .. centre! air and heat in
city. adults onl'f' . Cell 814·446 ·
0338

.tt

Redecorated apt., 2 bdr., t176
onty . C1ll 304·175· 5104 or
304-876-6388 .
Furn . apt . 919 2MI. Ave. Galli·
polis. stlant bath, •ingle male.
*150 mo., ulllltl" patd. Ctll
44&amp;-.U18 after 7pm.
Furn. 3 rooma • batn , upltaira.
clean . no pets. adults, rsf . &amp; dep .
req . Ct11814··4111· 1619.

---------0
2 bdr .. naar Slfvar Bridge Plaza.
Ni011 carpeting, water &amp; garab·
age paid . Ctlll14·44&amp;· 7026.

Fumithsd efficiency apt .. pri·
vate &amp; quiet , lingle working
person only . Call !1•· 446· 4807
or 614 -446-2e02 .
Unfurnished 2 bdr. in Crown
City. Call 814-256· 6520.
2 btdrcKimaptln Pomeroy abow
Krogtrll . n8'Nty remodeled. Cali
614 -992 -&amp;218 or 814 · 992 ·
7314 .
2 bedroom apt . in New Haven .
W. Ve . Nllo'llty remodeled . In
town . Call814 -992 · 7481
1 bedroom furnished apt . down
stafrs. Depo11t requl,ad. No
pets. Call 814-992 . 2937.
In Ra~:tna , nict 2 bedroom
duplex . Newly carpeted. Fur·
nished . 1226 . Unfurnished .
1225 . D•pollt. 114-949 -2801
Of 814· 949· 2860 .

house fo r MI.
south of Gallipe.
Call day• 814·
nights 114-441·

1100.00 month plus electric.
ptf1ially furnished Phone 304
675 -8911 .

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooma and
light house ....ping rooms . Pari!
Central Hotel. C1ll 614·446·
0758
Furnished Room. Range &amp; 1•
trig ., 1115. utilitill paid . 919
2nd. Ave., Gallipolis . Single
male. ahare bath. Call44e·"16
after 7PM.

46

Spec a for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk.
Route 33. North of Pomeroy
large lots. Call 61•· 992·7479

Merchand 1se

Govem ment Homes from 11 .1U
repair l Also delinQuent till
property Call 1!05-1!187 -6000
Ext GH -9£106 for in ior~n~~tion
7 room neuse in Chester , Ohio.

Price red uced Halt down ,..,
lik11 ren l fa f live yean . 1!11 • ·986·
3571

2 bdr house nice netghbofhood.
108 Kineon Aw .. GaAipalis .
1300 mo., m.,.,. applitnc".
C•ll 814 · 4.•1!1· 2410
Houee tor rent 3 bdr ., in Crown
CHy, 1150 mo .. ref . &amp; dap Call
614-258 -19!1
3 bdr. house in country. ntar A10
Grande. aec. dep ., no~·· 1240
mo Call SU-24.15·6439.

3 bedroom. 2 story house with
vinyl aid ing . Naw gutters tncl
down spouts . Natural 9" haM.
woocl-bumllf', 1 car
locatfld on Duteh Town Hill in
Minenv llll. Ctll 614 ·992 ·
7769

5 Cour1 St. J bdr. IUtctltr~
furniahtd . no ~·· U&amp;O mo .
pk/1 utilit iM . referen c" a dep ·
oalt. Call 1!114·441· 4928 o r
614. 446-9580.

Quaint, okt•r home in tOWft
Racine. 3 bedroomt. b.ttl, ktt·
cf'len. ltvlng room , dining r()Om .
Priced 13!5.000. Phone 614
9•9· 2540 eft.,- 1 :00 p.m. wM·
dtvt. tnytlma waall:ertda.

12 mi. from G8flipoli• in H.nnan
Trac. SchOOl Dtst rlct 4 bed·
room tri·levM houM, fireplace,
CA. htet ,...,., ptNate .. mng,
1200 per month . reference
required • dlpelft. Cell 814·
448 -1252. or 114-44e-3148.

Ouality ·built 1 h story Tudor
style heme, situ~111d on !i
wooded acrte , tocated just off
Sand Hill Road , only 10 minut•
from Point Pleasant ,
188 .000 00 . 304·895· 3303 .

In Raclnt. nice 2 bedroom
duplex . NrN!y carpl1ed. Fur·
nlahed . *22&amp; . Unfurniatled ,
1225. Dapollit. 814 -949-2801
Of 614 ·949 -2810.

g••·

live in ona, ....,, the othlll', two
bldroom hou .. and two bed·
room mobile home. Call after
5 ,00 p.m. 304·175·1483.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

4 room houn. Lutton IMHtt, 2 bdr. fully fumilhed, 12xll5.
orlgk'lll owner, good cond. 1. . . oonv. 6oet1:ion, Upper Atv... Rd ..
Uvlng room. kttdttn. wahtr 11M water peld , MO. dap. requited .
dr;'er hook up , nMJ~t roof ~ Call 114· 441-1118 Of 814·
fumace. ltrge lot Mt. V1m011 441· 2430 .•
Avt location, will conakftf fl.
nenclng, 304-87&amp;-8&amp;92 orpref. Furnished, cHit, batutlful rtvarerllbly 875· 2121 after 5:00.
viM, In kanauga, no chy 111111 .
Fottara Mobile Home Perk. Call
House for nla in Muon , 114-. .1· 1802.
t)() ,OOO.OO. luy now Wore
lnt ...nt ratee 00 up, 304·111· 2 bdr. 1110 mo. plu1 dapolit
1743.
C~ ll14· 378· 2•31.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Ol111e St. , Gallipolis. New &amp; utili
WOOd ·COalltOVes, 8 pc WOOd lR
suite 1399. bunk beds *199 ,
antron ntc:ltners 199. nevw &amp;
uHd bedroom .ui1ee. rangn .
wringer wadlers , &amp; aho• . New
livingroom suitft 1199 -*1599 ,
ltmpa. alto buying coal&amp;. wood
llo\'es. Call 814· 441· 3169
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sotu 1nd ctlairt prictd from
1285 . 1o *895 Tlb lt!l. S60 Wid
up to *126 Hlde ·a ·b«&lt;s , U90 .
lf'ld up to *550 .. aofa beds
1145 , R1clinars . 1225 . 10
1375 . Llmpt from 128. to
IH&amp;. ~ - dmatt• from *109 .•
to 435. 7 pc . 1181 1ndup . Wood
ttblt with llx chairs 1285 to
t745 . Dnk 1110 ~ to 1225 .
HutchM , 1550 . Bunk bed com.
plete with manrn... . U75 .
tnd ~ to 1396. Baby bacia.
*110 . Mattr•sus or boa
aprings . full or twin , •13 . firm.
173. and 183 . Queen teta.
122&amp;. 4 dr. cfl1111 , *49 . &amp; dr .
c heau , t59 . B•d framta ,
120.tnd 125 .. 10 gun · Gun
cabinltl. 1360. a •• or electric
rangt~ 1371S . Seby mtttrMsea.
136 &amp; U6, bed Pram• *20.
125. &amp; uo. king frame •eo.
Good ulactlon of bedroom
suit ... rock••· metal clbintts,
hNdbotJds 138 • up to 185.
U..t Furniture ·· Ortlltr , • bed.
metal Office delka . 3 mi111 out
BulavUie Rd . Open 9.-n to 5pm,
Mon . thAI Stt.
814-. . 1 ·0322
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wtlh..-., drytrt, refrigtrltOrl,
rang11 . Slttgge Appllancea ,
Upper River Rd .
S tone
Ct"llt Motet. 151,· 441· 7398.

*kl•

County Appllanoa, Inc. Good
Ul.t appll~ncat end TV Mts.
0"" lAM to fPM , Mon lhN
lot. 114·441· 11H, 127 3•d.
Aw. 01llpolfl. OH.

IHE'VE BEEN ~'liNG OFF
o.Jii1 EARL.' { INVESTORS., 10
PUi A cSOOD FACE ON THINGS·

73

Antlqu .. . brass b«&lt;s and lamps
polished end buffed , 30.t·875·
14155.

54

Misc . Merchandise

Callah.n 's Used Tire Shop. Over
1,000tir ... slz1112. 13 . 14, 1!,
16. 16 .15. 8 mil• out Rt. 218.
Call 61 .t-258·6251 .
Now tailing ordtr11 for Elatar
Candy and cak•. Boxed c;endy.
variety for filling baskets, chooo ·
lite covered chenln . Call 814·
441!1 -8693.
Hoapittl bed with manress •
side reilinga , lib new . UOO .
Call 614-448 -0880 .
Hetvy tnduatrial 20 ton preu,
motor puller, metal band NW .
House- salt~ or rent . Call 614 ·
367 ·0242 .
Computer· Radio Shack TRS ·
80. model • with TRSDMP120
prinlet. TRS 80 mini ditc drive.
Cai1814 -2415·50e2. 9· 4. Mon .·
Fn.
Se1 of golf clubt. MacOregor1985. Call 114-448 -1807.
2· 1.t in. ~WI. 1 mowing
mach1ne, firewood for aale f35 .
sat of cu ltNttOF1. Clll614· 448·
96.t6 or 614· 446 -4830.

Mixed hardwood slaba . S12 per
bundle, containing appro11 . 11ft
ton . F.O .B.t Ohio Pallet Co ..
Po meroy, On10. Call 614 · 992·
6461 .
Two grave pkltt in Meigs Me·
mory Garden1 . Cell 614· 992·
6174.
TONY ' S GUN REPAIRS. hot dip
reblueing, all typ• of gunsmi1h
wofk. fest aervice. 304· 1!175 ·
4631 .
300 bales. good first cuning
hay. 11 .00 bal•. 8~ Franklin
Fireplece, calll04·882-2144 .
White Fr"'dl Prov~tial bad ·
room au he. dark bedroom aulte .
Power Cr1ft 296 wekltr. lthict
Oatt Slay .... S-W 38 apec:lal
Saveg11 30 -30, 304·876-&amp;813 .
Fo r 111• quilu. n.~gs and
tOpl 304 · 675 -2791 .

CJ~ itt

Twin size m.nr•a and boll
lpr;ngt tor ule, alto new twWI
mtttrns . 304·882-27151 .
17" " tlandmadeclown dollsiJ~ .
each. Firm. Aaaoned co lon .
l0f·675 -3695.
Smith and Weuon Model 39. 9
mm, automatic pitltol. btre clip
U26 .00 . 304· 076 · 3!191.
Fill Easter Btllltts with Cebb .. •

Hunt in g and Fial'ling Filma
wukty t ill April 11t. 2nd SMW·
lng . Dicit Kirby Qulker Boy
Callt . Tri C ountyS~f1 Shop. Pt.
Pleuant . 304·676· 2988 .

55

Building Supplies

Building Materials
Block , brick, ...,.,., pipM . win dowt. lintels, ltc. Claudl Wirt t•• · Rio Grande . 0 . Call 614 146·5121 .
l&lt;lfltucky Lufl1) , Ohio lu"1) ,
Ohto Stoker. Yard or deiNery ,
cement biodl1 and building
materiaL Gt lllpolil llodt Co ..
Pina St .. Gatupolia , Ohkl Call
814 ·448· 271!3.
Utility Bldg . Spl .: 30 "1140 'x9 '.
Eavt w · 15 "18' sliding door'
Mn/ . door· 1&amp;21515- arectad . Iron
Hor111 Bldaa. 814 -332-974!5
collect .
810ck. brick. mortar and maIOnry tupplie~ . Mountain ltatt
Block. At. 33. NtM Hav., , W.
Vt 304· 882 · 2222 .

56

Pets for Sale

Btiat'llttCh Kennell All-brltd
grooming . Envli•h Cock er Spt ·
nlelt . 388· 9790.
Oragonwynd Cattarv Kennel .
CFA Hlm•laytn . Per-sian and
Siameta kiHIInS. AKC Chow
puppiH. Call 446· 38,._. attar
7PM .
For tale to good horne . Melt
Norwoig., Ellthoulld . 219· 822 ·
50151 orW{it•l41 CaphoiBNd.,
Elkhort, Ind . 48&amp;18.

68

Fruit

&amp;

c,....,.

Vegetables

n .oo

greens
Coli 114· 448·9&lt;42.

bulhtl.

)

f'OL. ITICAL CONTRIBUTIONS."

!

Vans

&amp; 4W

74

r,;:;:::::;;;::;::::::::-r;,;:;~~::;;~;~~1
68

&amp;

Fruit
Vegetables

Fancy Fruits &amp; Vegetlblll.
onion Mtl. seed potatoes. 10
per~nt ditcOUnt to til Senior
Cilizena. B&amp;S Produce, 20ti
Viand St. Pt. Phta sant .

66

Farm Equipment

CROSS 1!o SONS
U .S 38 We~t. Jeckaon , Ohio.
814-288-1461 .
Masay Fergu10n. New Hollencl.
Buah Hog Sal• • S!n'ice. Over
40 used tractor• to dloose trom
• 00"1)iete line of new &amp; used
equillmant . Largn1 Mtection in
S.E. Ohio .
JIVIDEN'S FARM EQUIPMENT
614-446-16715
Chack our Special Sal• pricn on
long Tracton &amp; VMmeer htv
equil:lment 'With fin encino tvtilt·
ble It 5% W"tttr"t. A complete
line of bale 1\andling &amp; feeding
ecctsaoties . grinder mlurs,
wagon1, rotary tilltr~, rotary
cun.-.. bladM , cuttlvators, disc,
plowa. aeeden, post drlvera,
woodapliUtra. gatel. power
w11hers &amp; Wheelliorse Lawn &amp;
Garden Tracton. And'" us for
a coff1)1ete line of parts &amp;
MrviCil .

USED: A variety ot uald trlc·
ton, grinder miktf', wegons,
tobacco setters. sprayer, cultiva·
tort, disc, plows. complanter.
harrow . rak• . lqutre behtr,
n-mwing mechine, tedders, rid ·
lng IIWn mower .
1980 long 810, 4 -WO . 6 ft..
dilc mower , 10ft. tedd• rake. 7
ft. J .D. aide mower . Call 614·
246·!11i67 .
Trectora tor ula . AC wide front
~d wtth 3 pt. hitcfl. A-1 shiCle
8 N Ford tractor A· 1 thtpa. C1ll
aher 6 :30PM 81'· 388-841!19
cttMel tr.ctor. ek.
dean, theet metal IJOOd. paint
good, good rubbtf. 16.960. 10
h: . birch wtt.tl disc f796 . 15
bot1om Cau plows t595 . Call
614· 286 · 6622 .
1000 FCM"d

830 Caae wkte front , Otivtr J
bonom Pow• 1300. e ft. wheel
disc *495 . 8 ft . Wood buthhog
1395. Call 814 -286·6522 .
2010 JO If actor . JO 2 bottom
plowt. JO disc. U ,950. Call
614· 288 -61522
135 MF tra ctor. 6 h . HI
bultlhog. 2 bonom plow. 3 pt.
diac. t3 .8915 . Call 614· 286·
8522 .
Repo11 ..1ed · Must
QuOflstt style ltHI
Brand new . naver
40dO tnd 60x90 .
InformatiOn c111 Paul
249&lt;

sell two

buildings
erected
Fot more
419· 669·

8000 Ford dine! tJactor elttra
cl••n. shHt metal good. paint
good, good rubber 159!0. 10 h
Birch wheel disc 11915. 6 bottom
call plowa *1595. Calll14-288·
8522 .

1315 Ms . tractor 5 h . HI . Bush
hog . 2 bottom J)lowl 3 pt . dilk
13896 . Call 8111 -28&amp;·1622 .
2010 John Deer tractor. John
o..r 2 bottom plows. John Deer
dhc . 83950 . Call SU-28&amp;·
8522 .
830 c•e . Widt front , oiNer 3
bottom p6ows 1300. 8ft. wheel
dltc 1495. I ft . wooda bush hog
139&amp;. Call814-288·11i22.
Fltf'maft Super A tuctor, h'f'drlu·
lie. PTO end equipmlf"lt . Runs
rHI good. 304-878 · 7611.
Befora you buy your next tractor.
get 1ht batt prica. Siders Equip·
mant Compan'f', Henderaon, w.
Ve . 304·8715 -7421 .
9N Ford tractor . nM peint. new

tires , recently o verhtuled
11800. 304-e7&amp;· 3694 '"" 5

pm.

&amp;

Fertilizer

Bidwell Caah Feed Store. W~l
ltocked on all your Spring needs .
Rt . 564. Bktwell. Cal1614 · 3889688 .
Setd potatou. onion sets.
Qtrdln stad .,d Nit fish. II • A
Market. Har1ford , W. Va . Open
every day. e a.m . to 10 p.m.

r m n Suppl 1~s
r. L1vestor.k
61

Seed

Tr~n s porlatlon
71

Autos for Sale

19n Gremlin 1380 or b"t
offer . Call 814 -258-6 417
anvtlme .
78 Dodge Cott , eke. cond .•
11 .460. Call eu ..... a .o159
lifter 6 :00 614· 318· 9688.
1979 Jeep WagonHr 4-WD,
AC . AM ·FM auto .. U.600. Can
814-446-4141 tfttr 6:00PM or
on wnk~ds .

3000 1977 M•ctd• dieuf,
perfect: condhion, prlceraduced,
n~ tirn . many optiona. CtN
afler 6 , 81 .. · 448·9•78 .
1984 Dodge O.erger 2 .2. 5
spd., 1£1 ,000 mi .. AM-FM c••·
rice. Ctll 614· 371·2728.
1985 Chevatte 9,000 mi ., 2 dl'.,
AM-FM . 13. 260 Cal 614 · 379·
21192.

THE SOV IETS WANT
ACC E7, TO OUR C&gt;'GNU5
\~.THEY ~EED ITS
MOfm. IT'i TO TRA CK
TH~ ACIEN7.

1984 Chv.ne 2 dr., 38,000.
S2 .SOO. Cal 114-379-2682.
1980 Ply TC3 55 ,000 mi .. auto,
AM·FM , a2 , 100. C.l 814. 379 ·
21182.
1978 VW Rabbit IUIO, air cond.,
AM-FM sterao. relf dtfrolter,
••c. interior. good redial tires,
pri ce 1760 . Call 614 · 388 ·
81 . ..

newly niW . Clll61.t-25•·8444

1976 Datton B 210. doetn't·
Nn, MW 1irll, body in fOOd ·
shape, UOO.OO. Phon• 304··
&amp;37-2642

68 Ptymouth valitnt 4 dr. good
shapa, tittle rust . •soo. 71
Ptvmout"
engine ~
tom down with trantmiiiM)n and
radiator. Cell aftsr 8:00p .m .
614 -!192· 8145 .

'00

1983 Z28. PS. PB, tir. cru ..1
control. Excellent condhion. For
salt o, trade. Ctll 814-742 ·
2400.

1972 ChtvY c..,.;ce, run1good,
5:00 call 304-

•eoo.oo. eft•
Livestock

Ragilt•ld AppaiOu 11"11re. gre11
contnt horlt fo, the beginner.
30~ · 876 - 8799

64

Hey

&amp;

Grain

May 11 .00 bale. Call 814· 2&amp;8 ·
18 11!1 .
400 baH. ml•ed h.y 90 centa •
bile. Cell e14· 388· 8448 .
30 large round b•l• hsy . Call
014 -371· 2468 or 11ol · 3792171.

"80 Rtbbit, air, AM -FM , 4 door.
6 speed , IXC COnd, 304·•78 ·
6169 after &amp;:00 PM
'74 Chrylter ltlllon wagon.
need 1 10,.,. worll, 1600 .00.
304·075· 1388.
1988 Camero . red with blk lf'ld
Jed interior, bw mllaeg•. 304·
676·6510.

1986 Ford £acor1 , • ap.-d,
black with red plnetrip•. •m· fm
cat1ttte, 14, 100. Call lfl• •
p.m. 304 · 937· 2021 .

H*Y ~d Orchard graM and
ckJvtr milced . n...,ar wet •1 .2&amp; 1
b..t . Call 814 · 448· 4611.

1977 Pontlpc BonniYIIII, 4 dr.
111 power. •11callant oondtt~n .
no rust . t1200 . 30'·871-3&amp;84
attw 5 p .m .

Large round bal• of hay . Can
detlvtr. UO . Call 81•· 992 ·
7401.

72

Sold ltrm. Must ..u 2000 bel•
nica hty. 11 . Lllhlf Farm.
Rutland. All watther
Call Goebel Angus Farm. Coot.
vlllt . 114-817-3831.

tee••·

Mlud h..,. large equara baiH,
.1 .50 . 304· 876-6579
For Mit 860 baiH of co"ndili·
oned hay. never wet . first
cutting, miud hey. 11 .00 . Ti·
mothy 01.21 . 304· 898· 3010.
Driad. ground, lh•Ued com.
10.00 par cwt. 30ol-488· 1031 .

Trucks for Sale

1978 FOf'd V. ton PU. ltandtrd
tuns ., air . s.. et 141 Fourth
Ava.. GallipoHa. Oh. n .200.
1&amp;84 F-210 XLT Fo•d, 2 whiOI
driY•• . IL .,gine. flltdbact
sylttlm, 8 cyl .. 4 btrral Clrb.. 3
apd. auto, wtlnul brown wtth
deaan tan r.terior. •~c . cond.,
aatraa: bug ehlald &amp; ntnnlng
bo•d. Call 114 ·441· 1751 .

fu•

1801 Ch""'Y pk*u,, I ft . bod.
body n..clt .,,... wort, qlne
1\1 na tood. mlka good woril:
ovclo . Coiii14· J79 · 2807.

0 ® Magnum,

P .I.

(I) MacNeii·Lehrer Newsh·
our
® Billy Graham' Sheffield,
England Crusade
Ill Leo Buscaglia
0) [%l Ripley' s Believe it or
Noll (CCI The arduous test·
ing done by NASA and the
FAA to insure passe nge r
m~n . l

WH ERE D'YOU T HI~I(
-rnEY'RE TA.K.IN' US?

YOUO. GLIESS 15 fo.S GOOD -'S

M IN E! LOOKS LIKE WE'RE
HEADit-.1 ' FOR THAT CA.NYON

YONDER!

Sermcs

lA) .
@ Odd Couple
8:05 (I) MOVIE: 'Tho Night of
the Grizzly'
8:30 0 (!) illl Family lias In
Stereo .
@ College Basketball: llli·
nots et Iowa
9:00 O C2Jill1 Choers In Ste reo.
I]) 700 Club
(!] College Basketball

Home
Improvement•

Tournament: Big East Quarterfinal Game
fj) (l) COIIOIJO Baake1ball
Tournament: SEC Quarter-

am I doinq?

is ridiculous!

comin'! An'
throwin' po'

out into

th' cold 1

Jes' b'cause he
owe a measii.J
thu't4 dolla' in
back rent!

®

Plus .. er, a...

two,fort4-five
late charqes!

RON ' S Telavision ltrvlca.
Hou" calls on RCA . Ouez11r,
GE . S~allng in Zenith. Call
30ol-171\. 2398 or I 1• ·•••·
2414.,

*

IRVING BERLIN/THE
MAN &amp; HIS MUSIC
WPBY

RINGLES 'S SERVICE . up•
rltnctcl Clf"INI'Itlf, elactrician.
maaon, painter. rooflngliftChtding ho1 tar appllcedon) )041.
175-20aB .. 171 ·7318.

®

Great Performances:

ln~ing

Barlin·s America
@ Mystery: The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes I
(CC) A man 's suspicions
are aroused when he is of·
fared a job co py ing the Encyc lopedia Britann ica . (60

illl

Nigh1 Court A
kid·

comfort a beautiful amne·

sia vic ti m. In Ste re o.
(IJ To Be Announced
10:00 0 C2J (H) Hill Street Blues

..

.

•• AN'GIT THAT
CRAYON OUT OF
'{OUR MOUTH

cf SUPPER TIME, 0 /=1
SUGAR DOODLE d

Ctlflo: Plumbing end Heetine, ){
ye.,, up•ien~ . unstop dreina_
New-remodeling -repair wort..
Phone 304 ·882-2012 .

83

86

SNAKE!!
IF HE PUTS

ON YOU.I'UKILLHIM11

~OR Til

l ·'-86

+ K H 64
• .I i ~ ~
• 10 i 3

+K 3

By Jam.. Jacoby

EAST
• Q 52

WEST
South certainly had a leak y club
stopper for his jump to two no-trump.
but he hoped his length in clubs would
compensate. Otherwise, with 18 high ·
card points and a good five-card diamond suit. he made the right rebid .
At trick one, declarer has a key play
to make. depending on how he r ead s
the club situation . The opening lead of
the club queen mighl be from A·Q-J·
10 or from a longer holding headed by
Q·J-10. Declarer cannol tell which il lS
with certainty, but it is more likely
from a five-card suit than from a fou r·
card suit and more likely from Q·J-1o
than from A-Q-J-10. On this deal. if declarer goes up immediately with the
king, he is quickly set. since the r eturn
of the suit gives the opponents the first
five tricks. If he plays low at trick one.
he stays alive. East wins the second
trick with the ace. but must now abandon the suit.
When declarer gets to dumm y wi th
the spade king to lead the diamond 10,
he has another key play to make
When East plays low. he must unbl ock
by playing his nine , or once again the
contract fails. When he plays the nine
and West plays his singleton eight , de·

+J 9 i 3
" Q8 4

. IO!Ih3
. Kti~2

+a

+ t\

+ QJI08 &gt;

i

SOL'TII
• ·' 10

"'K
+ A Q J9 4
• 964 2

Vuln erable Both
Dealer South
West

North

Ea~t

South
I +

Pass
Pass

I •

l'il"-"

2 NT

3 NT

["l,I'-S

I'.as~

Pnss
Opening lead • Q

thus r etaining the l ead m dum my

enough limes to pick up E:a st's wellguard ed king . Tr ue. the Singleton eight

with West was a lang shot. bu t 11 cost
clarer can now lead dummy 's seven. nothmg to play for !ha l posSibility

THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN

by

I 1'e't Oighl

I Assailed

4 Fashionahlr 2 S1&gt;&lt;ak
8 Neck part 3 Sly
9 German
city
11 YrmPn

,.aport.
hy Cupid

hour

17 Now
19 Yale

student

4 Reproathed
5 Ameri can

j urist
6 Badly
7 Refusf'
to hear
8 Calif. vall ry

Yesterday's Answrr
2lll.a lian
25 ( 'nndtll"to r
misfortun e
l'ity
. 3 Wt'::tpnn

10 With

13 Way out
22 Prison
15 Maph~
rt&gt;lf'ast'
genus
23 ",Juan · z~
18 Without
'ilar
the chasrr 24 Ent: lo ~u n ·

21 Rine pan

22 Sec kel
or cornice

32 llemenwd
33 Baffled
36 Cherry
variety
36 Mu sical

Holmes and Watson ac: ·
ross Europe to the Reichen -

DAILY CRVPTOQUOTF.'i - Here 's how to wnrk II :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

of

Show Guest host Joan Rivers welcomes Pani Davis,
Valerie Harper. Ron HO·

ward and Peter Allen. (6 0 ·
m in .) In Stereo .

Cll SponaCantor

Coat . lim•tont, gravel, etc.
O.l~e'ed 1 ton 1nd up . Jim
Lanter, 304·676 -1247 or &amp;76 ·

(IJ WKRP In Cincinnati

fii iiJ ®Tui
0 (I) Nlgh1 Hoot O'Brien

PEANUTS

and Giambone investigate
a b rutal father -daughter
double murder . {60 m in.)

Upholstery

IR).

Cll @) ABC News Nlghtl ino

TRI STATt

ll) Trapper John, M.D.
t 2:00 I]) hst of Groucho
(!) Spoedweek
I]) Entortalnmon1 Tonight

UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11&amp;3 Sec A...... O'"ipolia. 1
614 · 448 · 7833 or 1!114 ·441· - ~
1833.
I
r
R I. M Furn iture Mtnufecturing ~
lt. At. 7 . Crown Cily, Otl, Cet'l ,
e14-2S6 -1470. ull he. 1114- .~
448 · 3438 . Old &amp; new .•
Uphosterlld
~

lll iiJ Rawhide

®

'I

.

of Pollux
3 4 Prntwr
35 St·;uy' ~ouu d

20 Lack

One letter stands lor another. In this sa m~ : e ·I 1s lLSPd
for the three L's, X lor the two D's , etc. S1 n ~1r INters.
apostrophes, the length and formalion of the " ord.s are all
hinls. Each day the code letters are different

CRVPTOQUOTE
3-6

1'MQA S T O

Hours'

Ken 's Wtter Service. Wells,
cin•rna, pools flllad . Phone
614· 387· 0623 or 1!114 · 3&amp;7.
7741 night o' day .

29 Hnnk
31 Mo t hl·r

piece
37 Formerly
38 Glve ear to
39 Lyric poem

11 :30 1J C2J @ Tho Tonighl

7911

87

Two key plays
score the game

car was hers. (60 m in.)
@ Mystery' The Advln·
tures of Sherlock Holmes I
Professor Moriarty tracks

@ Nowo
11 :00 0 C2J NowsCen1or
I]) Man from U.N.C.L.E
(IJ 0 I]) Ill @) (H) News
fil ii) Bonny Hill Show
® Eyowl1n111 Nows
11]) Case Of Dashiell Hammol
11: t 5 (I) MOVIE: 'Tho Gallon I

A FINGER.

7J97 .

(CC) Mack and Ka ren visit
Michael in ja il. while Olivia
refuses to admit the mari ·
juana found in Michaers

The Sound
American Music

Jam" Bo ys Wattr SlfVice. Atto
pools ti lled. Call 81ol -258-1 141
or 814 ·446- 1175 or 81•·448 -

JIGGLE

What that darl nc d ress she wore at the
dan ce was- MOR E GONE THAN GOWN

subst.anct•

® Kno1s Londing

stein:

Ganaral Hauling

WEAPON

James Jacoby

31 Burmese
nati ve

boch Fells . 160 min)
10:15 (I) Billy Graham Crusada
10'30 I]) To Be Announced
(I) Rodgers and Hammer·

Excavating

Good-1 Exc ..,..ating. ba ..m.-.u.
footers . driv.wtyl. septic tanks.
ltndacaping . Call lftytimt 614·
ue -4537. Jam" L. Davieofl,
Jr. owner.

BOUG H

BRIDGE

judge. 160 min.)
I]) CBN News Tonight
I]) Cll (j] 20/ 20 (CCI
ll) I])

BARNEY
THAT PAPER!!

Now arrange ttie CirCled letws to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gesled by the aOOve cartoon

'*"'·

alegal Jesus Martine z is
the fall guy for a cr ooked

Buntz presses Bates for a

fER !f STOP EATIN'

A DUEL.

.ll.ftiCI-It loc*. No. 2111Well*lt lor t1 .15 plue55 etnll poll•;• 1111! "'rnll..g from
Jlnblt , cJo 11"111 ~r. P.O. lor 4366. Otlen&lt;lo , FL 328&lt;l~ ·4J66 Include yo.. r
ldd,.... tlp eodt 111e1111..,, 'fOV' cheek peyltllll to .,.,,.,~ rbo&lt;H.•

23 Numerous
24 Hurl
26 Entice
26 Weapon
27 Isolate
30 Sticky

suspect's positive 10 when
a ca p is murdered . and par·

#fA
I I'

I Answer:

14 Criticize
(sl. )
, 15 Total up
16 TV Ot'WS

naps an orangutan being
used for scientific experi·

Richerd and Sona Interior anct '
e~~:teriGr plinting, wallpal*fn(;
•
phone 304·876· 7147 .

I'LUMIINO
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth eM Pine
Getlipolis, Ohfo
Phone 114·448-MII o, 614 .. 6.. .77

Yesterday's

their di11orce action pro·
ceeds, Sable and J ason
find the.mselves fi ghting
over custody of the Colby
estate. (60 mi n.)

compassio nate Bull

Rot"V Of cable tool &amp;trlltint.';
Moat w.tls completN ttmt dey~ .
Pump ..U. and s.mce. 304·
895-3802

CARTE~'S

TO

(Answer s tomorrow)
Jumbles: EVENT

12 SrniLLPn

9:30 I) C2J

Stark1 TrM end Ltw .. SIN+ca,
landauping. 30.-571· 2010. : ,

Plumbing
Heating

WKA'T H E '5A IC'
WHe,N HE WA5
C.HALI...E N6EC'

1

til (j] The Colbys ICC) As

ments. wh ile Dan rushes to

8o

tNAANABj
J r o
IIEN[J tj

~a• ..,:ef"
Ad~

min :)

Fetty TrN Trimml"f. stump
removal . Call 30ol-175·, 33, .

82

II( J

finals
ll) I]) ® Simon &amp; Simon

GASOLINE ALLEY

8! Suit* IIIIUveria. Sharp. Still
undar warranty . 304 : 675 ·

7471

~ NewsCanter
I]) Green Acres
(!] Mazda Sportslook
I]) 0 I]) Ill @) illl News
f1l ffi Dilfront Strokes
® 3·2·1, Contact (CCI
(]) Eyewitness News
Ill To Be Announced
ll) Good Times
(I) Andy Griffi1h
I) ~ NBC Nightly News
CD Tho Rifleman
(!] ~rtsCenter
I]) W @) ABC News
f1l ffi One Day a1 a Time
0 I]) ® CBS News
® Doctor Who
Ill Body Elec1ric
ll) Jelfersons
illl NBC l'jews
([) Carol Burne«
0 C2J PM Magazine
(]) Alias Smith and Jones
(!] College Basketball
Tournament; Big East Quar·
1erfinal Game
(!) Entertainment Tonight
fll CfJ College Basketball
Tournament: SEC Quarter·
finals
0 I]) ill1 Wheel of Fortune
CIJ Nightly Business Report
® Eyewitness News
&lt;ill MacNeil-Lehrer Newsh·
our
Q) @ Divorce Court
ll) Barney Millar
® Mary Tyler Moore
0 ~ Halley Returns
I]) Colltll)o Basko1ball'
Ohio State at Michigan
llJ 00 illl Jeopardy
(I) Yes, Minister
® Wheel of Fortune
Q) illJ Enlertainmen1 TO·
night
ll) Bob Newhart
(I) Sanford and Son
0 ~ illl Cosby Show In
Stereo .
CD Wackiest Ship In lhe

safety is examined. (60

1179 tri'YtiUelltr St~ wheel, 31
aon.,u. 1978 Ford . . . . .
F-260 . CtN 1,4· 2•5· 5012. 94, Mon .· Fri

81

III

Army

'

895·3138.

63

&amp;,oo

FILE-'?

ft .

89&amp; -3138 .

' Ja Olde Tornado, '18 Olde
Tom.:lo, ' 71 Uncoln Contin•·
tal , 141170 mobile home, eft good
shapa. 304· 773-5310.

7:35

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1975 Dodg·a Dart 1460 . 304·
'82 VW Jetta ditlel, air cond,
star.,, r8dlal tlr•. 44 mil• psr
gallon. 04.000.00. 304·8718109.

A

THEN JT.:sPJ?fMeoriA'T"f:P/

Rebulh Chevy 350 tnginl, 304·
882 · 2303

,980 cn .... ette good cond ..
•1 .100. Call 614· 388·8448 .

1966 F. Galuie 600. 12 .165
actual mil• . Ontowner. 312· 481. 3 tpd. Good Cond. for ttt.
uoo. c~• 814· 992. n82 .

UfE

~E'CI pE'

1970 two doof Chevellt, foro
parts, 304· 896-31638.

VInyl Repair Senne. Home.
butin., • auto. Setting. Mon.·
Stt. 1 :00-8:00 . F0t detlitJ ell
Hanry. 114-379-2&amp;30 Of 814·
379· 21138.

1979 FOf'd LTO . 302 auto, 2
door, air . AM ·FM eight trac*.
rtdio . t1500. CaH &amp;14 -742·
T138 anytime .

you

de.,.a. 8U-2&amp;8-M91eve .

Oava' a Home I"'Pf''WfMnu.
Vinyf. elumlnum gu1ter1 • C:UI·
tom trim . 17 ya.-. ••J*"ienca,
Colll14 -44t-9417.
•

2Bn .

7:05
7:30

l - 8 .2&amp;1120 flighway ttald tirft ,

19&amp;4 Che\l'f' . .00. 1977 Ford
.550 . 1973
window van
GMC pickup *650. Call 114·
367-0541

1 974 Ford -480-four btrrallTO
wegon , 80,000 miltt. Clean car
in tnd out. *1200. 81ol -949·

6:35
7,00

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessorial

1919 Chevette ' dr .. 4 spd.,
*2 .000. Ctfl 114-446· 3830 .

1976 Electra limitld, loaded ,
full power, 18.000 mile~. new
radial tirn, very good condition .
Call 614 · 448· 0677.

Vl\.

BORN LOSER

8ASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondftlona' ltfallmt DUiftn· ·
•••· local ref"*'~ fumlah. ..·
Frat •Uma1•. Ctll collac:t
., -814-237 -0481. diY or night:
Rogara Blltment
Waterproaftng.

I,

CY6NU~

Evinn.tda 4 .., boat motor, cell
304· 773· 6303.

good cond ., runs good. Ctll
614 · .. 8 ·0643.

1982 red . EXP good cond .. low
mil11 . Call 814 -448 -0365.

8:05
8:30

151h foot tri · haul 1tarcrlft bolt
wtth tr-.il• . Good condition . No
rnotof 11200. c~ 114·992·
2143- 6~0 Colll14·992 ·
1373 .

78 Oldt Sterfire. good tires,

19n Buick Regal. Cell 614·
448 -4646.

AND THEY
&lt;;OME·
ONE TO FL~THE
~EED

19ft. Gl•ftron V-hull. 120 h.p .
inboerd &amp; outbo1rd Mercruiltf'.
tih trtiler. 245-15040 llftef 7 :00.

79

Name your weapon !

8:00 0

Motorcycles

76

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

BRUTS

EVENING

.O .

Boats •nd
Motors for Sale

\,!!} ~~~

Unscramble these f~r Jumbles,
one letter to eacn SQuare. to form
four ordinary word&amp;.

THURSDAY

1985 ATC Big Red 260. lbcel·
lant condition . Etectrtc start end
kictln•" · cana14·,42·l05e.
Moto•cycltl Port• poHtohltl end
buHitl. 304-175-1416 .

75

~

3/6/86

'83 CJ15 JMJ). 6 cyl. 4 . . .d.
AM·FM redlo . bnuh gutrd,
trailer hitcfl . new tirtl , no ruat.
06,500.00. 304·8811-3313 .

25 in . cok»r TV. 21 in. 8 -W TV . 2
door Hotpoint refrig ., 12 OJ fl:
freultf' upright. 10 cu ft frMDr ,
gn dryar1, tlec . dry.,., tuto ·
matlc withers. Fir•tona Stor...
MlddiiiiOrt.

Antiques
53
- - - - - - - - --

CHARITABL-E AND

197&amp; Chwy Blazer. Call 114·

For sale 3 piece living room aun
1150. Call &amp;14·985· 3&amp;52.

Brown Naugahyde klves .. t .
swival rocker and ouoman
*350.00. Eantltoneplaid ractlning chair 180.00. Hoover Dial·
A · Mttlc uprigtlt vacuum
uo.oo. 304-675 -&amp;981 tfter
5 :00 PM weekdeye, w..._.,d•
enytimt.

''lT '5 ALl. TAI".EN A
FINANCIAL TOCL. !"

:

;

.. 8· 41148 .

Pid!.en• Ustd Furniture. Good
quality used fumitur11 . Open 9 to
8 or ctll for •pointmen1 .
304-875-6'83 or 87&amp;· 1460.

TO MENTION OUR

•*·

All cad AI, cedar ch_. t75 . Cell
114 -742 -3092

v••

II ~OT

ft IJ\lf.\.0 fii)ft ) !&lt;! TliAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Television
Viewing

1110 Datsun. o1 wheat ..V,
trudl. air. 5
no rult. eac.
oond. 13.000. firm. 304-111·
3111

3 cheira tor stle. Clll 614· 441 ·
1349.

The Daily Sentinet - Page- 15

Ohio

.1972 Ford 1 ton wtltl cenla
rtckt end du~ bed 12U• .
19155 Ford 1 Yt ton tnlel lx2
tren~ . Run• good •noo. 1971
lnterntrional ~ton. Auto. P.S,,
P.ll . Good work trud!. 1550. Clll
114·985· . . 114 .

la•g• cua1om bultt couch , exc.
cond.. *1 10. Electric r~nge .
good cond. 111 &amp;. Ctll 614· 24!5 ·
5ol39.

P•tch 01' Mr . T-Dolls. 304-875·
5480.
Household Goods

Thursday, March 6, 1986

·mcK TRACY

Truck• for S•l•

1980 VW pickup &amp; spd., full
injection, •11celtent condition.
Ctl11!114· 388·9708.

King aizt watM'btd , waval•e
manr.... all acce•eori• . Call
814· 2&amp;6· 5&amp;08 eft• 5 .

Sytv•n la 23 ln . 8 e. W TV , good
cond .. S40. Call eU -446 2297.

APARTMENTS . mobile homes .
houtll . Pt. Plaaunt and Gstlipo lis. 1!114-44&amp; -8221 .

72

MoUohan FumituN &amp; Appllan·
c.. Rt . 7 Nortfl , Kaneug~ , Oh.
Call 814 -o148-7444 . Credit
tarmr; avallabl•.

Efficiency apartment for 111nt
Roosh Lane in Ctla~h i re . Call
304· nJ.&amp;928 .
1 bedroom apt . tor rent. B11ic
rent lttrtl 1215. 1 mon1h tha1
includat 111 utilities . Deposit
r~tquired of 1200 . Contlct VII·
lag• Manor Apt . Middlepor1
614-992 -7787 . Equal Housing
Opponunity .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

\/all.., Fumitura, ntw • ustd .
ltrtt aection af quality fum l·
lure . 1218 Euttrn Ave ..
Gallipolis.

200·C steam jenny 1500 Call
64·446 -1142

Houses for Rent

3 bdr . house, p19e. Located on
ft t. 180. 1308 IN' month. *160
diPQeit No 1*1 Call &amp;1 4 · 388·
9783

Household Good•

2 bedroom 11t floor IPirtment
for rent in Middleport, with yard .
8175 plu1 utiliti .. and deposit.
Call614-992·7177

51
41

61

Drop· fn
range with aye I......
oven . •too. Call 114 -985·
4454 .

R1·t·la ls

Homes for Sale

• bed room
fireplace. 3 mi
lis. *29 .900
448 -11!11 6 or
1244

Farms for Sale

44

86 acre~ or 105 acres . Call
1114-388-8139 .

Real l state
31

Thursday, March 6, 198~

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

MOVIE: 'lmpeoso'

Ill Stor Huotlor I Sign Off
til ID Eye on Hollywood

G M V
RMB ~ T 'Q

s ll

Q AR
AYIR

S K X M 1· I ' \ F ll

KYT

I. A M

QM

S L/

A S K U B F G
Y A.
L I&lt; ·' F H I'
Y..terday'o Cryptoqaol"' WH EN A F.-I ll . SAFE
SYSTEM FAllS, IT FAIIB RY FAILIN G TO F.\ II. ·''I FE
JOHN GALL

12:30 I) C2J illl Lo10 Night with
David Lettermen In Stereo.
I]) Bill Cosby Show
(!] Golf: 1985 Womons

Kemper Open Highlights
(IJ ABC News Nightllne
llJ(IJ MOVIE: 'Code Name:
Dlemond Hoed'
Gil (j] Newt
@ MOVIE: •rhe Jesse Ow·
ens Story• Pert 2 of 2
1:00 I]) Doble Gillis

0t

F1sh 111. Hole

(6 Wh at's Happe n in g Now
€1) 7· W rld , Wild W es t
I!J J2 CNN Nows
1:30 LJ! Fath er Knows Best
([j New s
1:40 CL MO VIE The Conve rsa .
t ion '

2,00 I]) 700 c fu b
(!] Mazdo SponsLook
fll ('i MOVIE: 'Ciaopaha'

®

CBS NP. ws Nigh1w a tc h

�.•

•· Palle-16-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 6, 1986

Epjoy God's

•

Plan peace talks with communist rebels

••

".
0 "

•' "

·-•"
•
•

••
•

HOLDS NEWS CONFERENCE- Phlllpplne Defense MlnblerJuM
Poace EnrOe !l8ld today In a news conference a1 ht. headquarters the
end of the 20-year rnle of President FerdlnMd Maroos was a set back to
the oommunlst Insurgency In the Phillpplnes. UPJ.

Shootout
•
motive
sought
CINCINNATI il:Pli - Countv
Investigators remain unC&lt;'rtain
what sparked a shootout involvmga
machinegun and handguns at a
house in western Hamilton Coun1v
Wednesday.
"
The early morning shootout left
two men wounded, one of them wilh
seven gunshot wounds"
The reason for the battle has not
been determined by authorities, bu!
they said lll&lt;&gt;y were checking the
rossibility !hat drugs may havp
bPen a motive
, In one of two r a rs police
~ confiscated in tlle case. a carhr of
~ explosives one officer described as
: capable of blowing up two '"good "
- Sized" buildings was discovered "
" Authorities said ttl&gt; shootout mav
• have involved as many as six men

and the woman who lived in the
house. Policr' said maS!. if not all. of
Ill' men were acq uaintances"
11le 1wo wou ndf'd m£'n wrrf'
identilied as Ron Kennedy . 31. and
Peter Morales. Zi" Kennedv was
shot S(•ven times and underwen l
surgery at Providence Hospita l.
where he wa s lis!ed in slab!!'
condltiln. Morales suffered '"'"
gunshot wounds and was in S&lt;'rious
conditiln at l:nivrrsltv Hospital.

.
:
•
•

: A neighbor said she heard ono ·
• shot a! the l'ouse and then a couple
of seconds later . heard aboul sLx
: shots in a row. Politt&gt; said lh&lt;'
: weapons included a mac hinrgun
: and at least one handgun " Morr
han~ ns probablv were in,·olled .
authorilic's said "
"Therr

iU f'

numr rous

shot~

: :nside !hr rt'Sidrnce- in !he w;ill.
:· ceiling and noor ," said Hami l! on
: County Chief JX&gt;put1 Shrnff \'ic
· Carelli.

.

• The shootout look place a! thr
:- home of Eldora Hinrkle) on Bond
·: Road in Whitewatl'r To ~TIShip ol
: Hamilton Countv. nrar thr In diana
bJrder.
) Besides lhr two woundt'd nwn.
• the woman and anot tv:r man wrrc
: questioned by autt"otil if's . Onf' or
two morf' mf'n coul d haw ' bN:&gt;n &lt;II

the house at

lhr limr nf !he
: shoOtoul. bul rna;· hal"!' rsca [X'd
before (XlliCI' arriwd , au!horiii('S
· said.

; No jackpot winner
: CLEVELAND oCPI1 - Thrrt'
were

no top-prizf' winnf'rs

m

Wednesday night' s Suprr Lott o
draw ing, increasing lhr jackpot 10
, at least $6 million for nr•XI WCI'k 's
·. game.
• The numbers drawn wt'rr li. 21,
"2l, 34, :l9 and 40. Lottery officia ls
. · said they found no lirkets matching
all six of Ihe numbers
Although the top prize wen 1
. unclaimed, ffi players pir km fiw of
:·. the numbers to win $749 eac h. Also.
: 4,464 players had tow- of thr
· numbers, winning $5\ ap1ecr"
There were 79. 198 1ickrts sold
: matching thrre ofthe numbers . Thr
holdel'S of trose tickets mav
: redeem them tlr $3 each.
·
; Ticket sales for til&lt;' weekly
: drawing totaled $3.917,766. with a
:- total prize payout of ~'i46,m.

.
:-

'•

'·

~· Funds

distributed

: · Ohio Motor Vehicle Registrar
; Michael J . McCuUion announced
;'the January, 1986 distribution of
-,n!.o:I),6Q!.48 in license tax ll"~;venues to Ohio's local govT'"'ments. Meigs County 's rortion is

; S9J,165.!Xl.

'

•••

....-

MANq.A, PhUipplnes (UP!) Deputy Defense Minister Rafael
Ileto was named to head a
commission on national reconcilia.
tlon to hold peace talks with
communist rebels, a spokesman for
President Corazon Aquino said
today.
"Right now we are setting up Ibe
mechanism," presidential spokes·
man Rene Saguisag said.· 'We have
received feelers from various
groups for a dialogue and eventu"
ally this will lead to a grant of
general amnesty."
Saguisag said Jieto, a West
Point-trained former deputy armed
forces chief recently named depu ry
defense minister, was being tapped
to head a commission on national
reconcilia lion to oversee peace
overtures and the amnesty process.
Wblle expressing optimism the
program would work out, Saguisag
said the procedure was complex
and that It needed the concurrence
of the National Assembly.
The Aquino governnient released
the Imprisoned founder of the
Communist Party and three guerrilla leaders Wednesday, despite
t: .S. and military warnings the

move could assist the leftist · Maria Sison, 47, the Communist
Insurgency.
Party founder jailed since 1911;
The four were the last ol 517 Bernabe Buscayro, 42, til' alleged
Filipinos arrested by the Marcos organizer of Its armed wing, the
regime to be ordered released by
16,0CM&gt;-strong New People 's Army;
Aquino In a program of national and Oeld commanders Ruben
reconciliation.
Alegre anrl Alex Birondo.
Shortly after the release, Aquino
Defense Minister Juan Ponce
held a 15-minute meeting with the Enrile told a news conferenre the
four at her headquartE-rs. The develoJXnents that led to Marcos's
meeting resulted In a pledge by til&lt;' ouster and Aquino's assumptiln of
four "to work for the strmgtll'ning power had "Isolated ... In a very
rl dt&gt;mocracy," stat£"-rnn television substantial manner" the Commu reported.
nist Par.ty although the New
The four were Identified as Jose People's Army remained "intact."

Weather forecast
Rain and snow likely today, with highs near 40. Moslly cloudy
tonight, with widely scattered snow Hurries and a low between 10and
15. Partly cloudy Friday, with highs near a!.
The probabllity of precipitation Is ro percent today and ll percent
tonight.
Extended Forecast
Saturday through Monday
Fair Salunlay, with a chance d rain Sunday and Monday. IUghs
wiD be In the 3\sSalurday, cllmblnglntolbe 40sSunday andlnlothe
iiOii on Monday. Overnight 1oM~ wiD be between 10 and 00 early
Saturday, rlslag Into the 3ls Sunday Jll)mlng and Into the 3ls early
Monday.

Farm workers' union
signs labor agreement
HARRISBURG. Pa " 1UPI I -A
farm workers' union that signed a
landmark labor agreement ~1lh
Ca mpbell Soup Co. will try to do the
sa me with Pillsburgh"based H.J .
Heinz C'o .. the union president says.
"Pl•n nsyll'anla is a kf'\· stale
right now for our n£'.''(1 cam.paign ,"
sa id Balde mar \ 'elasqurz of the
F arm La bor O r gan iz ing
Comm111re.
Thr agl'('('mrnt FLOC finalized
last momh with the Camden . N.J .,
soup company was hls!oric from
two st andpoint s. Velasqurz said
Wmnesday"
II wa s a lh!1'&lt;'-way pact involl' ing workers, toma to and
cucumber growers. and the growers' ma jor customer. Ca mpbell
Soup - and lhr firs t farm labor
conlracl outside C"ali!ornia , Velas"
qurz said .
" l!' s critical to br mg other food
pi'OCI'ssors under similar agree·
ments. We have to have a balance
In the industry, so we don't have to
put Campbell out on a limb in an
uncompefil ivr situation, " tlle union
chief sa id"
This time, he believes, it will be
easier.
"1! took us seven years with
Campbell, but we didn't know
anybody and nobody knew us. We
didn'! have credibility, " said the
founder of the union based In
Toledo, Ohio.
Now, he added, " I think they'll

lake us seriously."
\'elasque-l said he is encouraged
by Heinz' public response to
FLOC 's announcement that il
wants eonlracts to cover tlle 3,00l
workers in Ohio and Mlch1gan who
pick 10matoes and cucumbers.
A Hei nz spokesman said Wednesday the company wanls to see
whether the new agreement is a
"workable approach."
"We fE'&lt;'I it's an Industry -wide
situation that Heinz has to br
concerned about," said " Harry
CarrolL "What we're looking for is
ancqulta ble solution .whateverthal
turns out to be."
Ca rroU said the Pittsburgh firm
is willing to talk to a specia l
.five-member commission ll'aded
by former Labor Secretary John
Dunlop that helped work out Ill'
Campbell contract. Heinz would
also encourage other processors to
join in those discussions, Carroll
· added"
Despite Velasquez' optimism, the
union chief visited Philadelphia and
Harrisborg to drum up support
from labor and church groups In
case the Heinz campaign requires
11.
" If we don't have a collective
ba rgai ning agreement this
summer with Heinz we will send
our staff into Pennsylvania to put
pressure on Heinz ." said
Velasquez.

A thr€e·member U.S. congressional delegation led by Rep"
Stepll'n Solarz, D-N .Y., met with
Enrile today.
Enrile, who led a popular milItary revolt that toppled the a!- yearold Ferdinand Marcos regime last
week, said he and armed forces
chief Gen. Fidel Ramos discussed
proposed U.S. economic and military aid wtth Solarz.

ELBERFELDS

Shuttle commission
holds secret session
In any case. eommission chairCAPE C'ANAVE RAL, Fla.
man William Rogers said earlier
i UPl i - The Challenger disaster
commission assembled at the NASA's decision-making process
Kennedy Space Center today for a was "clearly flawed" in the Chal·
secret session on Ihe eve of a public Ienger launch. and President RE'a·
hear ing Friday focusing on new gan said Wednesday, "There were
film and t!'Chnical details of the ways in which eounsel and advice
fa tal fli ght .
with regard to til' safety factor
Ironically. the shuttle Columbia could be Ignored."
"I don't know whetll'r there was
~ad been scheduled to blast off
ear ly today on a heralded asb·on· any intent or whether anyone
omy m1ssi0n thai included studies kno,.1ngly just gambled and took a
of Halley· s eo met but the flighl was chanCl' or whether II wa.• just an
cancelm in !he wake of Chal- error in judgment," Reagan said.
Recovering debris from Chal"
lenger's destruction Jan. 28.
The subject of the hearing, !he Ienger's right-side rocket could
firs t outside WashingTon, was not provide crucial clues to what went
announced. but sources said ttl&gt; wrong. Because the wreckage Is
panel will hear testimony about resting in water 1.:nl f""t det'p Challenge r' s launch pad. the way beyond the range of divers the shuttle's suspect booster salvage crews arc practicing on
rockets wet&lt;&gt; assembled. details debris from til' left -side l:xJoster,
about the telemell)' beamed down which is closer to shore in 210by the shuttle before it exploded and foot-deep waler"
But so far, salvage operations
other topics.
Rear Adm. Richard Truly, the have not yielded any booster df'bris
because of bad weather and
II('W chief of !he shuttle program.
was scheduled to arrive at !he mechanical problems.
Rep. Edward Markey, D- Mass ..
shuttleport late today but it was not
knO\m ~ he is scheduled to testify said in a letter to Ro&amp;ers that
befo!'(' the commission. No details alt hough the J an. 23.19ll5. canrella "
of lhr "working S('Ssion" toda)· lion of a Pentagon shuttle fligh! by
Discovery came amid concerns
wrrP announcf'd .
Ashan statement released by !he about cold weather. the concern
commission W!'dnl'Sday sa id th(' "apparently did not involve the
hf'aring Friday will includf' tl'Siirn · solid rocket boosters being quPSti on)" from ii&lt;ASA offici als and oned in the Challenger accident."
"' photogra phic film and telemetry
"It would seem pertinent to
d;;tta srlPC!('Ci and E'xaminfld to examine closely whal the decision·
date ."
making pi'O('('ss was that led to the
The aSSt' miJI)' of Challenger's postronemem of the Diseovcry
H -s tory solid·fur l hoostrrs is a kry launch and contrast it "ith what
qurstion bt:cauSl' a ruprurf' in thr occurml on the ill -fated Challenger
righ! hand rorkrl lriggNed lhr mission. " said Ma rkey , chairman
l'Xplosion of !he shu"le's giant of a subcommittee that addresses
nuciC'ar isSU('S .
ex tern al fuel !&lt;ink "
Columbia had been schmu led to
..\ sourCf' wh o as ked not to tc
blast
off at 1 a.m. EST today for an
1drnlifim said handling problems
slowed the as&lt;:('mbi;· of !he lower astmnomy mission that included
two fu el S&lt;'gmrnl s. The fa!al lrak is pioneering studies of Halley's
!hough! to hc11·r happened at a join! comet. The mission has beE-n
grounded indefinitely.
co nn c'C: tin~ thosr two Sf&gt;gmPnts.
"We're et&gt;rta inly dlsaprointed, "
Onr theory under cons id~ral ion sa id Ronald Parise. an astronomer
b:· the commission i.S whrthcr at NASA's Goddard Space Flight
frrrzing trmperalurr lhl&gt; nigh! Cenl er and a member of Coium
before !Hunc h in!Prfert'd with !hi&gt; bia's crew. "We had a one o'clock in
opera! ion of CI11Cial rubber 0-ling the morning launch" /Today 1 1
seals in It&gt;-• joint s. pn•centing Iti•m would have been in orbil. So we
from eont a in ing hot ga s and flame were certainly looking forwa rd Ia
from burning propellant in side .
!hal. "

Leaders of the oullawed Communist Party of 1he Philippines and its
military wing, the New People's
Army, have hinted 1hey wooid
consider a dialogue wi[ h t II' Aqu ina
government but have emphasized
they would rot lay down their arms .
"Surrender Is a painful word for
them," one adminlstratiln official
said.
Manila Archbisrop Cardinal
Jaime Sin said in Rome he expected
some of the rebels to surrender to
him on his return to Manila on
March 17.
Asked about Sin's statement,
Saguisag said, "Any effort to bring
about national reconciliation Is
welcome" but that he had no
knowledge of the surrender.

SPRING

FRIDAY, MARCH 7th and SATURDAY, MARCH 8th
Save on selected items during these special sale days and take time
to see what's new for Spring 1986- Shop every floor, visit every
department - You'll find quality merchandise- New selections
for you and your family.

$2 ~~CK

SELECT GROUP

LINGERIE

Hanes

s - includes toddies.

l'l'li-li gowns, mili robes,
pajom• .,d boby clols.
Petite. smelt, modiJm largo
101d extra ' -· By Lor·
ralne. Somye, Te•sheen
ond llootfoon.

HANES UNDERWEAR
Includes all Red Label and Blue Label
men's Hanes Underwear. Briefs, T·
Shirts. A·Shirts and Boxers. plus Big
Sizes.

'12.00 Lingerie ..... 19.00
'16.00 Lingerie .... '12.00
'18"00 Lingerie ... '13.60
•22.00 lingerie .... ' 16.60

~~\~::
\ 1\::YI

~,\ ~ -

~ ' ,~;~

\,~\;~(,/~~.',

l tee~:;~

woMEN's

DEfiMJEANS

SPORT
SOCKS

~':'.:OO~w!!:".:'i~

Straight leg, 14 ounce

1

INFANTs

i

SLESTREPOECRSH

I::':~~~'::,:-;,~":;; ~,;:·siz'd ooli~l

S.

l' / / •"
~~

White IMtll Plllelmtet..,s one
..
to 42 . lengths 30 Ill 36" oil:efits9to11 . BO%oonon , 20%1-m plus M, L
0\or
regular"'olity
priao S22"95.
AI first
- rot polyost•" Regulor price" $1 .891 '7 .00 go....
...,pers_.. -...... ...... .. .

~~/£

,_$1'· 788

t

•

Sale Pricet!

SALE

SALE

l~o~s:a:;~:::::::::: ::::::

99&lt;

p....

t-·-.;~,~:~;. ·.·~-;;.-~-~-~.;~...;;-_,_,___,J.._.~.-·•.;:._::_,_,..P!.- _c:_~_:~"_:,:;~~·~: ~::~ ~:. ,
f'..!l'--.I.
.,,,......__
I

...

7.

SPECIAL!

NISSlS AND

,. '"; KNiT

;~

t/;.1
i'&gt;,.---=;---"'-l SWEATER (~~/

MEN'S

AND YOUNG
MEN'S
LIGHTW£1GHT IJ Cl. CIS

/

SCHOOL I
JACKETS ·' J

J

TOPS

-!

.. \ and open vent style!! .,

·

·.

_._.._._._.._.._._.._..__.._..-1"',.__,.._.._..,......_.._..._,__._...._..._,_.._..-..-..-...-•..-....-..-..-.-

~

'~ .~~

BOYS'

~
r\~:~ ':_ 'i~ JEANS
.6 ·

I

l.\(

~

I

hiW SPRING SJYLES
NISSES AND JINIORS

i

! COORDINATE
!
SPORTSWEAR
~.::~ fi:. ::::.t'':: I
By wra~r
J-'Y'

decisions we feel are fair ."
The area includes the 12 counties along til' Ohio
River- Oermont, Brown, Adams, Scioto, Lawrenre,
Gallia, Meigs, Atllens, Washinglon, 1\fonro!&gt;, fllol mont, and .kffton10n - and Carroll, Tuscarawas,
Holmes, Coshocton. Guernsey, Harrison, Muskin·
gum, Perry, J&gt;lbo, Ross. Noble, Morgan, Vinton,
Jackson, Hocklnl and Highland counties.
The delegatioll, five senators and 12 representa·
ttv~. Is bi-partisan and wUI attempt to prevent the
ARC goals from "going by the wayside." Boster said.

By JOHN FRIEDMAN
OVP staff writer
" Do it."
That is the philosophy Robert
Brown, the new director of the Ohio
Department of Mental Retardation
and Developmental Disabilities,
says he is using to run the
depanment .
Brown. a former member of the
Ohio Hou se, Its Finance Committee
amd the father of a mentally
retarded son residing In a eommunity home. was aproin ted last
November by Gov . Richard F.
Cl'leste 10 replace Dr. 1\'linnie
Johmvn as the beleagured agency's head.
"We are determined to find out
what needs 10 be done and tll'n go
out and do it ," Brown told a
gatll'ring of Gallipolis Developmental Center employees Thurs·
(jay •fternoon. "We want to be
oriented towards the people we
serve... we need to bring the depariment Into the alth century, but not
without some kicking and screaming, pE'I'haps "
1lle agency. Brown said. has
tftn trying to change Its attitude
the last t11ree months after being
"kicked around - and deservedly

so" under prevkms heads. "We
have had some V1'IY SE'I'lous
problems with some ct'ltters "
Brown admitted, "especlauY In
Cleveland area and the at
Batavia."
On his second day In his lll'W
rositk&gt;n. Brown deckled to close the
group home In BatavIa, move its
patients to similar factllt!Ps and
temporarily transfer SOI"M CDC
personnel to till' facility to supervise
renovations.
Brown said he favored the "least
restrictive envlronmtnl" lor
clients, saying tbee departtnent. ill
the past. has pirsued policies rl.
de-lnstttutk&gt;nallzatk&gt;n and 0011·
instttut lonallza lion.
"We need to lind way1 to ..-vt'
(clients I Instead of mtto, " be said.
The department, Brown added,
needs to place clients where they
will ll'st be served. "lb!re are
some ll're who· should not leave,
while others srould be treated like
everyone else."
·One d the realmS for the crop In
the ntllllber of pwpe lnstltutk&gt;lllll·
!zed Is the trrc&gt;rovemmt In community services and group homes,
Brown said. About 4,tnl proplt are
In group homes_ while annt'rr 5.1XXJ

the

COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPii-Gov.
Richard F . Celeste's $$4 mllllon
capital construction program lor
1917-88 Is halfway through the Ohio
Gmtral Assembly with bipartisan

"This pian was dt'Veloped by the
eovernor and the Office ci Budget
and Management in close consultation with legislative leaders from
both parties," said Rep. William E.
Hlnlg, D- New Philadelphia. til'
chief sponsor. "It was a real
bipartisan effort."

Hlnlg said $1M mlllion wUI II'
elevated to construction of mental
bealth and retan1a lion facUlties,
including community cart projects. Parks, prisons and other 111llt
facllltles will nocetve smaller
shares, he said.
One-half of the money is for
renovation and maintenance projects. Through Its unlvenltiH, the
sta te is Investing In doWII~
develo(Xllent plans In Oeveland,
Cincinnati and Dayton_
Hlnlg said the plan will protect
Ohio's existing Investments and
create 10,tnl new construction jobs.
"This plan Is atlordable," ll&lt;&gt;sald.
"It Is anticipated by the director of
the OBM and the Legtslatlvr
Budget Ol!lce that tltr IIII'W)' M1l
be avaUable." He said a llmH dl.ll

•

---iA1if--l-l.:~fifSP?RTS1~1a~s~~-r---·s~·;·-IOY~L FAMILY

I
I

BATH
TOWELS

I

(ANNQN

l

i,. ft

·
•3.99 MATCHING

· '4.26

HAND TOWEL.. .... ..... '2.60

VANH[l/XN

~~"-

SHIRTS

l

i'~I~

::Z.':v.;.,·

\
1

-f

I\

Patternsando.olidcolors .
45 tnchfls Wide. EI.cel·
lont for quitting and gen.

PlAYERS- ~ eu'll sewmg
Solid colon 1n · s M L
XL. Short
;i Rog S1 79 end $1.99 yd.

fAMOUS

't~

I

l COTTON
KNIT I PRINTS

- ·,

A .new aelectlon of CO 10 rfut
pnnts. 88% cotton on 14% [ (
polyeater.
·
t
'6 99 BATH TOWEL

REG. s16.00

~~~

Sll. 99

pocltoto. !osition COlli. 4
button plockot

II Reg
Prints "" Sale S1 49 yd
$2 29 to 82.69 yd

Prints
Solo S1 99 yd
JReg. S3 4S end •3 69 yd

·~!-~~~5.1:9,~;..:~!,....._' .i -~,...!._________ :::::.~:_:~~-~-~-~

Open Friday

9:30 to 8
Saturday
9:30 to 5

ELBERFELDS

Use OLW Free
Parking lots

$22,194

are In intermediate facilities.
One of the department's goals is
"the utUization of generic services"
or services "available to everyone
else," which, Brown said, "will
l'llable people people 'io socialize
with people cl.theircholce." Brown
added he realizes his goals are
"Idealistic thoughts and aren't
going to happen overnight."
Cornorning the acency's budget
lor Ill&lt;' next two years, which is
currently being formulated, Brown
admitted he has "a sales jOb to do."
"Legislators are hit on the head
with a myriad rllssues - many the
average person Is not aware of," he
said.
At this stage, he said the agency
Is rect'lvlng a lll'Vell percent
Increase, the ooly agency to receive
such an Increase and $14 million
will be spent on insdtutlons.
Staffing problems are "a common problem among people servIng the moredllflcult to serve," but
Is rostly, he said. Brown admitted
the 1.8 to 1 employEe to client ratio
at GDC included administrative
penorutel, but "It wUI take at least
flw years to get the department oo.
the rtght track," he said .

•
IS

grant
accepted

ADDilE'liWI EMPLOYEI'l! - GDC Director Pam Matura (left)
loki the facllllles' employees Thunday lhallhey and the admlnblratlon
needed to won. ioget!Er to help ellmlnale some of tiE Ohio Department
of Meatal Retardation and Developmental DlW!Wtles' rroblems.
I.ooldnr: on Is Oltlo MRDD Director Robert Brown.

million has been placed on first·
yEer tx&gt;nd sales to control the cost_

necessary to assure regulation of
til' holding company for the
merged Toledo Edison Co. and
Cleveland Electric Illuminating.
Wltrout the legisl atiln, said
Quilter, a holding eompany rould
drain the assets of a utility, leaving
ratepayers in chaos wit !nut power.
Nuclear JXlWer plants rould be
Insulated from regulatiln by the
PUCO, he said.
Also receiving unanimous House
approval was a bill In creasing !he
penalties for misconduct on public
transportation vehicles.
Rep. Ray Miller Jr., D Columbus, said incidents Involving fight ·
lng. rock-throwing, smoldng, ha rassment and assault cxrur several
times a week on buses operated by
IJio Central Ohio Trru1slt Authority .

But Rep. ThOOUIS A. Van Meter,
R-A.thland, doubted til' availability
r1 mo_ney based on recent Income
IJ'Ojectk&gt;ns and the uncertainty of
recteral funding.
Rep. Marie Tansey, R- VermUIoo, ORr rttbe qlpOilellts, said folks
In her diStrict ooject to the Inclusion
r1 $4 mUllan lor til' II'~ "Rock
'N' Roll Hall of Fame" In
Cleveland.
TIE House passed unan lmously
and forwarded to the Senate a bill
permitting the PUblic UtUitles
Commission r1 Ohio to regulate
utility holding rompanles t1 ~lo.
Rep. J . Barney QuBter, DTol!do. said the legjslatk&gt;n Is

FARM WAN PROGRI\M - 101111 Wolle t1 1111Dk I ml'llrntrOy
rib Ohio 'l'reullrer MIII'J Dill Wfllnw tilt ~
• ' 1• loan prosram ot the !t&amp;aie In II'Ndllllllllr I .. a J11r6 'I nPL
Ml [ I I

farernrs facing extreme nfRI .
"Under the rest r1 drrumstanre;
to tum a profit in farming demands
a fair marb!t price, lmrort-exrort
balance, favorable weather and
access io credit, " said Wlttrow. "1
can't do anything about the first
four, but ~Ia's ftnandal communIty and I can once again give our
number one Industry a well deserved credit boost."
Withrow has requested a u particIpating Ohio state deposlt&lt;rles amd
Productk&gt;n Credit Assoclatk&gt;ns to
submit tll'lr completed 1986 agricultural Unked deposit appllca lions
by 5 p.m. on April 25.
This Is the second reduced-rate
investment cycle made rosslble by
the passage of Ohio's three-year
emergency fann bUI lasst spring.
Under the Jr~W&amp;m for profit
famrers In Ohio can apply to an
eligible Ohio financial institution,
lor reduced-rate agriuHural Unked
deposit Ionas. Ills tbe resronslbillty
rl tbe rotentlallendlng institution to
determine the credit worthiness of
the potential boJTOwer ll'tlre submitting Ill' completed agricultural
linked deposit application directly
to Withrow's ofllce. No ttdlvldual

Ohio Treasurer Mary Ellen
Withrow was in Pooieroy Thursday
concerning her lll'W STAR program
willch provides governmental subdlvllions with lnk&gt;rest bearing
Investments.
l.Jndtr the program subdivisions
can Invest money at a CUITeltt 7.7
Interest rate with dally comroundinl. Withrow says the proeram Is
betteflclal In !hal subdlvlsk&gt;ns do
not hav• to IIM!st their money for
long tenm. 'fllell can ge1 tt out of
the Investment situation In less than
24 hours. Investments are safe and
S«Ure under the program with a
good Interest yield.
Withrow pointed out Ohio was
number one In the natk&gt;n in
Investment perfonnance ill 1984
and In 1985 the state had a record
Interest return for tbe Investors
tota11J1c aboot •1911 mllllon. All ot
tllew tlllllp 111..-. been ICCOIIII&gt;'
lltMI wllllout addlq adtlltiDIIII
wcrllrr;s Ill ber staff, Wltllnlw llllld.
Mrs. Withrow al110 PJ!ntl!d out
that $100 mWion In reduced rate
Investments will be avaUable again
till.• spring to support reduced rate
qrblltural klans for ellclbl!o Ohio

'

BY KATIE CROW
Sentinel correspondent
Syracuse Village Council Thursday nigh! approved the first
reading of an ordinance accepting
an additional $22.194 grant for the
purpose of designing. constructing,
maintaining and operating a ma rina and launch ramp .
The grant is from the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
Division of Watercraft.
Council has already received "
S44.00l gram from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Bureau
of Outdoor Recreation .
This makes a tot al of $66,194
eouncil has received through grants
for the proposed marina. Raben
Wingett serves as grant administrator for the vutage.
Grants now tota175 petwnt of the
total proposed project.
Glenn Cundiff, council member
told council that cable reception in
the village has not improved as
promised .
Cundiff noted when council allowed a rate increase last year the
cable company pmmlsed the system would be upgraded and
reception Improved.
Cundiff asked that a letter be
directed to Consolidated Comm
Group suggesting tllal a represen"
tative meet

with

cou ncil . He

suggesled !hat unless improveMiller's bill mak es it a four1h men ts are made to the system
degree misdemeanor to eva de fare council should rPscind the ordi"
payment; alter transfers; smoke; nance ailowing the increase in basic
eat; drink: spit; or pl ay sound ca ble rates" Th e ordinance ca lled
equipment wl!l'oul an earphone . for an increase from $8.92 to $10.74
The penalty would be up to D days
for 16 chann!'ls"
in jall and a maximum One ci $250.
Cundiff noted the Increase in
rates went Into effecl October 1.
The House also:
1985. Cundiff Indicated the raise
-Agreed with Senate amend - should not continue until! he system
ments and sent to i he governor a is upgraded .
bill to eliminate Medi ae aid overDog problems
payments by aUowing cross-checks
Cou ncil has been faced wll h a
by the state auditor of recipient s
problem cl. dogs running loose in the
with state Income tax receipts.
vUiage. The county dog warden
-Passed, 62-ll, and sent to the has been contacted and has Ill'
SeDate a bill requiring railroads to situation uroer cont rol at the
remove garbage from their tracks " present time" However. if ot her
The House adjourned untU next problems arise addlllonal steps wUI
Thesday at 11 a.m. The Senate will be taken to correct the situatiln.
not be in session next week .
Council warned that dogs mu st be
confined to owner's IJ"operty or
owners will be citm to cou11 .
Council approved lhr fir st readIng of an ordinance l'fln!lting the
hours for vtllag£' owned park,.
The park and playground of thr
village, known as Syracuse Munici "
pal Park wUI be closm to the public
at 11 p.m. eac h nigh t un til 7a"m"thr
loan can exceEd SlOO.OOl.
following morn ing"
The Treasurer will determine
The former ~·y mcuse Roadside
linked deposit Investment approPark, ala~ SR 12~ will be closed a!
vals after considering financial
11 p.m. and opm at 7 a.m . the
Information including Ill' debt - following morning. No ovrrnighl
equity ratio, percent of Interest - parking will be allowed at tht•
operating expenses for tbe three
former Syracu."&lt;' Roadside Park ."
previous years, full or pan time
The parking area fort he ball field
farm status. size and location of the
will also be closed to Ihe pubhc at IJ
farm .
p.m. and open at 7 a.m. !he next
Onre the treasurer approves the
mornlng"
agricultural Unked deposit applicaThe tmnis rou11s will also be
tion !be eligible financial Institution
closed at 11 p.m. until 7 a.m. the
is notifed that It will receive a below
nl'XI day.
marb!t Investment, conditional to
The ordlnanCP "'ill be in full forcr
Its lending at a similarly reduced
and effect unl&lt;"s wri llen permisrate, four ~cent lower m one year
sion Is granted b; · thl&gt; Mayor or his
loans and t11ree pen'Cnl lower on
duly aproin tm agent to organlza.
two year k&gt;ans.
lions, clubs, associations or assem "
fllolween April and June, 1985,
bles for a spec ~ic evml or event s.
1,5"75 Ohio farmers In 82 counties
Vlolatoi'S will be fined not IPss
received $100 million In reduced
that $5 ror more Iha t S25 fort he first
rate loans through the Withrow
offense.
plan ot linked deposits.
The third and final reading was
To (rOVide Ianners with the
given to an ord lmmce fixing and
names d eligible local finanCial
regulating water rntes.
institutions and 1986 agrtcultural
Gene Imboden. fire chief, relinked deposit requlreemenrs, the
(Xlrted that a 1~50 -1960 apprec iation
state treasurer's oftlce is operation
dance will be reid March 15, at the
a toll free lnformatkln line, each
Syracuse Elemmtary School 'for
~Wrk day, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
those who have supported dances
That number Is 1~228-1102 .
(Continued on page 61

Ohio's Treasurer Withrow
outlines investment program

3

I

She said In addition to "having the ear of the
governor," the office would represenl the in leresiS of
the Appalachian region before state agencies and
co-ordinate ls&amp;-ues for the delegation.
Boster admitted that without federal money . which
peaked at S13 million in the 1970s, the off1ce and
programs it oversees will he a burden on the state.
"The state cannot replace all the federal money,"
she sa id. "But we can prolecl programs from some
cuts and maintain the network thai's been developed
!by ARC I. "

Capital improvements bill sales thru Ohio House

lbtou ....

I
I
I

Boster Is the chief sronsor of a bill to establish Ihe
Office of Appalachian OhiO in Gov . Richard F'"
Celeste's office. II would be the second office
representing a geographical area r1 the state. Boster
said there Is currently an office representing
Cuyahoga County.
Funds for the office would be transferred from the
existing office on Appalachia In the Department of
Development, which currently has a staff of one
full-time employee and one part -t lme employee and a
$1.1 million budget, the bulk of which Is provided by
ARC.

on per capita Impact, we don't always get the

\

jeans. 100% oonon l*!e
'
denim. Pre-wuhed.
TOPS : Knot tops and poly oonon blonds i1
R '21 95 SllJ_,
tonk tops. S~oo S. M. L 111d XL
eg. (26· to 30)
MATCHING SHORTS: In cuf111d "'d ..,culled
Sizos
JREAN,s ".. """'Boy"" •t7"4S ~ ~in~ !d'!,:!~~~Bslyle&amp; JunK&gt;r
19 95
1
S::;.l!o Rogu!an (8 to 14[ SlACKS: Woth plootod or plain front. Juniors J
JEANS """"'"'" """ '15"79 "'16. Misooo B to 18"
Reg. '21 .95 Husky
1'8.00 SPORTSWEAR .. """"'"'"'" .......0'6 39
Sizes 10 to 18
'14 "00 SPORTSWEAR ..... """""" "" """ 11 .19
JEANS ...........
•n 4S '16.00 SPORTSWEAR "'"""""""""' "" """" :12 79

26 Cents
1 Sections. 1 0 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday, March 7. 1986

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - Seventeen Ohio
legis Ia tors representing 28 southern rountles, mlndlu I
that the federal Appalachian Regional Conunisslon Is
"scheduled for doomsday," have formed a delegation
to help "bring the unique problems of the area to til&lt;'
attention of the sta te."
Rep. Jolynn Boster, D- Gallipolis, said Ill' arm
suffers from poverty. unemployment and a lack of
adequate transportation. compounded by a weak
political base and dwindling federal lu nds.
Poiltlcally, the area is weak because Ills sparS€1y
populated, she said. "When decisions are made based

·I

£~~ Prl~:!~sl

i

entine

Boster proposes Office of Appalachian Ohio

1lle peckage, which includes $413
million worth of projects a t coileges
and IWvt&gt;rslties, cleared the House
Thur!day , 84-9, and was forwarded
to the Senate, where hea riings stan
next week .

··1-'::. . · . ·

-- ( V-necks, crew necks or : . ·
1fl!j, I boat neck k&gt;okS Solid
,
lllln"'\ colon and patterns S. M. L · · ·
Size.
'19 Tops ..... ...... . '15 .00
•22 Tops .. .......... ' 17.55

Vol. 31. No.226
CIPrr!tted 1986

acclaim.

..,~, · .

~J )S&amp;eeveless, short-sleeved ;·. . ' ~ : .

Size S, M. L, ond XL. Light
Kalha lining . Snap front.
raglan shoulders . Kelly
green. purp~ 0t maroon .

$15 99

.

at y

e

'Do it'phllosophy used
by Ohio's MR director

PREVIEW SALE

SALE

•

beau~y ___ ,

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